vs.

    alone 对比 lone
    分析 词典对比 组词对比


    • Alone】 , 【Solitary】 , 【Lonely】 , 【Lonesome】 , 【Lone】 , 【Lorn】 , 【Forlorn】 and 【Desolate】 may all refer to situations of being apart from others or emotions experienced while apart.

      Alone】 stresses the fact of physical isolation and also may connote feelings of isolation from others.

      • the captain of a ship at sea is a remote, inaccessible creature, something like a prince of a fairy tale, 【alone】 of his kind
        Conrad

      Solitary】 may indicate a state of being apart that is desired and sought for.

      • Netta loved these 【solitary】 interludes . . . . She could dream things there and tell herself stories there, untroubled
        Powys

      It often connotes sadness at the loss or lack of usual or close connections or consciousness of isolation or remoteness.

      • being 【solitary】 he could only address himself to the waiter
        Woolf
      • an only child, he was left 【solitary】 by the early death of his mother... whose loss he felt severely
        Fulton

      Lonely】 may simply indicate the fact of being 【alone】 but more often suggests isolation accompanied by a longing for company.

      • he was lonely】 , but not in an unhappy sense . . . it was no hardship for him to be 【alone
        Canby
      • his grim look, his pride, his silence, his wild outbursts of passion, left William 【lonely】 even in his court
        J. R. Green
      • he felt more 【lonely】 and forsaken than at any time since his father′s death
        Archibald Marshall

      Lonesome】 , often more poignant, suggests sadness after a separation or bereavement.

      • you must keep up your spirits, mother, and not be 【lonesome】 because I′m not at home
        Dickens
      • her flight. . . yet smote my 【lonesome】 heart more than all misery
        Shelley

      Lone】 especially in poetical use may replace either 【lonely】 or lonesome】 .

      • in his 【lone】 course the shepherd oft will pause
        Wordsworth
      • the mother′s dead and I reckon it′s got no father; it′s a 【lone】 thing
        George Eliot

      Lorn】 suggests recent separation or bereavement.

      • when 【lorn】 lovers sit and droop
        Praed

      Forlorn】 indicates dejection, woe, and listlessness at separation from someone dear.

      • as 【forlorn】 and stupefied as I was when my husband′s spirit flew away
        Hardy
      • as 【forlorn】 as King Lear at the end of his days
        G. W. Johnson

      Desolate】 is most extreme in suggesting inconsolable grief at loss or bereavement.

      • fatherless, a 【desolate】 orphan
        Coleridge
      • for her false mate has fled and left her desolate
        Shelley

      Solitary】 , 【lonely】 , 【lonesome】 , 【desolateare applied to places and locations more than the other words discriminated above. 【Solitary】 may be applied either to something that is apart from things similar or that is uninhabited or unvisited by human beings.

      • a 【solitary】 chamber, or rather cell, at the top of the house, and separated from all the other apartments by a gallery and staircase
        M.W. Shelley

      Lonely】 may be applied to what is either far apart from things similar and seldom visited or to what is inhabited by only one person or group and conducive to loneliness.

      • heard not only in the towns but even in 【lonely】 farmhouses
        —Anderson

      Lonesome】 has much the same suggestion.

      • like one that on a 【lonesome】 road doth walk in fear and dread
        Coleridge

      Desolate】 indicates either that a place is abandoned by people or that it is so barren and wild as never to have attracted them.

      • as if nothing had life by day, in that lifeless 【desolate】 spot
        Trollope
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