Alien

Alien was a broad, subjective term. It could be applied as a noun or an adjective for any entity, object, place or practice which was not familiar. In one sense, it meant someone not from one's nation or locality. But more typically it was a synonym for extraterrestrials, or that which was "alien to humans". The Doctor, for instance, often admitted that they were an "alien" to their new human companions. (TV: Rose, The Runaway Bride, The Bells of Saint John, The Woman Who Fell to Earth)

However, the word was equally applicable to humans, from the perspective of extraterrestrials. As Melanie Bush once pointed out to an English cabbie suddenly brought in the presence of extraterrestrials, "We're all aliens to each other." (AUDIO: Unregenerate!) The Time Lords labelled Leela an alien when she visited Gallifrey. The Fourth Doctor, posing to fool the Vardans, ordered that she be banished from the Capitol for being alien. (TV: The Invasion of Time) Romana I once used the label "Earth alien" in reference to the natives of Earth. (TV: The Ribos Operation)

The term was trickier to apply to non-human Earth sapients. For instance, the Third Doctor referred to the Silurians as alien beings even after he discovered they had ruled the planet Earth millions of years before. (TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians) However, the Eleventh Doctor later stated that they were not aliens but rather "Earth...liens". (TV: The Hungry Earth) On an episode of Meet That Hero!, Supergirl introduced E.T. as "the sweetest alien ever". Later in the show, after E.T. grew a Kryptonian singing flower for her, she proposed the creation of an "alien club" - an idea the Twelfth Doctor was enthusiastic about, offering the help of his TARDIS. (WC: Supergirl Meets E.T.)

The Ninth Doctor once read an article in Heat about a celebrity couple. The Doctor noted that it wouldn't last, since "he's gay and she's an alien." (TV: )

Max quickly deduced that the dummies were alien in origin during the Dummy Massacre (PROSE: ) on 26 March 2005, (PROSE:, ) although Mickey Smith (PROSE: , , etc.) was unsure if the dummies were aliens or were weapons. (PROSE: )

Shortly following the London UFO crash on 6 March 2006, (TV: ) Rachel posted on Who is Doctor Who? to ask if any of the aliens were single as she broke up with her boyfriend Robbie last week and she felt it would be a good opportunity to get back at him, imagining his face if he saw her fly off with an alien. She suggested that going to the local cinema in a spaceship would be a bit more impressive than being driven around in Robbie's dad's Mazda. Rachel ended her message by demanding Robbie return her Cindy Crawford Workout DVD. (PROSE: )

A couple of days later, when publishing details about the UNIT website on his own website, Who is Doctor Who?, Mickey referred to UNIT as the "UN Alien Army". (PROSE: )

When Major Jenny Maguire asked if it would be to insert misinformation onto the UNIT website as opposed to changing the passwords following the discovery that Mickey Smith was using www.whoisdoctorwho.co.uk to release sensitive information in 2006, Sergeant A. Frederick told her, scoldingly, that she "[didn't have] time to knock up a load of fake conspiracy theories and fudged reports about aliens". (PROSE: )

Mickey Smith became suspicious of the Guinevere probe after he read that the probe had "stuff about talking to aliens" despite other claims that it was being sent to Mars for just soil samples. (PROSE: )

Revealing his true form to Ursula Blake and Elton Pope, "Victor Kennedy" proclaimed "You've dabbled with aliens... now meet the genuine article!" (TV: Love & Monsters)

Upon seeing the image of Joseph Serf, actually a hologram, Clyde Langer announced that he was "preparing to say the A word", clarifying to Sky Smith that he meant aliens. (TV: The Man Who Never Was)

According to a joke book which the Doctor and Yaz became trapped within, the best alien at steering a car was a Drahvin. (PROSE: Knock! Knock! Who's There?)