fremdling means one who is not a kinsman; a stranger. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 76 out of 100.
Why “fremdling” is a great word
FREMDLING — [Noun] One who is not a kinsman; a stranger or foreigner. From German fremd ("strange, foreign") + -ling (noun suffix denoting a person associated with the root). Unlike Fremder (a neutral, commonplace term for a stranger) or Gast (which denotes a welcomed guest), a Fremdling carries the faint, archaic chill of one who stands irrevocably outside the circle of kinship. It is the scent of unfamiliar wood-smoke on a traveler's coat in a village hearth, the silhouette of a lone figure watching from the cold edge of a harvest festival, or the touch of a hand whose calluses do not match your own—the physical weight of belonging to another, unshared world.
Etymology
From fremd + -ling. Cf. Dutch vreemdeling, German Fremdling, Swedish främling.
noun
- One who is not a kinsman; a stranger“There sisters for their brothers, sorrowing sore,
Last fatall framelings, one another gore.”