[syn: apart(p), isolated, obscure]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Isolated \I"so*la`ted\ ([imac]"s[-o]*l[=a]`t[e^]d), a.
   Placed or standing alone; detached; separated from others.
   [1913 Webster]
   Isolated point of a curve. (Geom.) See Acnode.
      [1913 Webster]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:
Isolate \I"so*late\ ([imac]"s[-o]*l[=a]t or [imac]s"[-o]*l[=a]t;
   277), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Isolated
   ([imac]"s[-o]*l[=a]`t[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. Isolating
   ([imac]"s[-o]*l[=a]`t[i^]ng).] [It. isolato, p. p. of isolare
   to isolate, fr. isola island, L. insula. See 2d Isle, and
   cf. Insulate.]
   [1913 Webster]
   1. To place in a detached situation; to place by itself or
      alone; to insulate; to separate from others; as, to
      isolate an infected person from others; to isolate the
      troublemakers in a classroom.
      [1913 Webster +PJC]
            Short isolated sentences were the mode in which
            ancient wisdom delighted to convey its precepts.
                                                  --Bp.
                                                  Warburton.
      [1913 Webster]
   2. (Elec.) To insulate. See Insulate.
      [1913 Webster]
   3. (Chem.) To separate (a substance) from all foreign
      substances; to make pure; to obtain in a free state; as,
      to isolate the desired product from a reaction mixture.
      [1913 Webster +PJC]
   4. (Microbiol.) To obtain a culture of a microorganism in
      pure form (from a complex mixture); as, to isolate
      Eschericia coli from a patient's blood.
      [PJC]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
isolated
    adj 1: not close together in time; "isolated instances of
           rebellion"; "a few stray crumbs" [syn: isolated,
           stray]
    2: being or feeling set or kept apart from others; "she felt
       detached from the group"; "could not remain the isolated
       figure he had been"- Sherwood Anderson; "thought of herself
       as alone and separated from the others"; "had a set-apart
       feeling" [syn: detached, isolated, separated, set-
       apart]
    3: marked by separation of or from usually contiguous elements;
       "little isolated worlds, as abruptly disjunct and unexpected
       as a palm-shaded well in the Sahara"- Scientific Monthly
       [syn: disjunct, isolated]
    4: cut off or left behind; "an isolated pawn"; "several stranded
       fish in a tide pool"; "travelers marooned by the blizzard"
       [syn: isolated, marooned, stranded]
    5: under forced isolation especially for health reasons; "a
       quarantined animal"; "isolated patients" [syn: isolated,
       quarantined]
    6: remote and separate physically or socially; "existed over the
       centuries as a world apart"; "preserved because they
       inhabited a place apart"- W.H.Hudson; "tiny isolated villages
       remote from centers of civilization"; "an obscure village"
       [syn: apart(p), isolated, obscure]
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:
164 Moby Thesaurus words for "isolated":
   abandoned, alien, alienated, alone, aloof, anchoretical, anomalous,
   anonymous, apart, archipelagian, archipelagic, at rest, calm,
   cloistered, closet, companionless, cool, cordoned, cordoned off,
   cut off, deserted, detached, disarticulated, disconnected,
   discrete, disengaged, disjoined, disjoint, disjointed, disjunct,
   dislocated, dispersed, disrelated, dissociated, disunited, divided,
   divorced, dwindling, ebbing, estranged, even-tenored, exceptional,
   excluded, exotic, extraneous, foreign, forlorn, forsaken,
   friendless, halcyon, hermitical, hidden, homeless, hushed,
   impassive, in a backwater, incognito, incommensurable,
   incomparable, independent, individual, inmost, innermost, insular,
   insulated, interior, intimate, inward, irrelative, island,
   island-dotted, islanded, islandish, islandlike, islandy, isleted,
   isolate, kithless, lone, lonely, lonesome, moldering, monastic,
   other, out-of-the-way, out-of-the-world, outlandish, pacific,
   particular, peaceable, peaceful, personal, placid, private, privy,
   quarantined, quiescent, quiet, remote, removed, reposeful,
   reposing, restful, resting, retired, rootless, roped off,
   scattered, seagirt, sealed off, secluded, secret, segregate,
   segregated, separate, separated, sequestered, sequestrated,
   set apart, sheltered, shut off, single, single-handed, singular,
   smooth, solitary, solo, special, still, still as death, stillish,
   stilly, stoic, stolid, stranded, strange, subsiding, tranquil,
   unabetted, unaccompanied, unaffiliated, unagitated, unaided,
   unallied, unassisted, unassociated, unattended, unconnected,
   undisturbed, unescorted, unfrequented, unique, unmoved,
   unperturbed, unrelatable, unrelated, unruffled, unseconded,
   unstirring, unsupported, untroubled, unvisited, waning,
   withdrawn
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
compact
finite
isolated
   1.  (Or "finite", "isolated") In domain theory, an
   element d of a cpo D is compact if and only if, for any
   chain S, a subset of D,
   	d <= lub S  =>  there exists s in S such that d <= s.
   I.e. you always reach d (or better) after a finite number of
   steps up the chain.
   ("<=" is written in LaTeX as \sqsubseteq).
   [Jargon File]
   (1995-01-13)
   2.  Of a design, describes the valuable property that
   it can all be apprehended at once in one's head.  This
   generally means the thing created from the design can be used
   with greater facility and fewer errors than an equivalent tool
   that is not compact.  Compactness does not imply triviality or
   lack of power; for example, C is compact and Fortran is
   not, but C is more powerful than Fortran.  Designs become
   non-compact through accreting features and cruft that
   don't merge cleanly into the overall design scheme (thus, some
   fans of Classic C maintain that ANSI C is no longer
   compact).
   (2008-10-13)