- I don’t like going out alone/lonely at night.
- He lives alone/lonely.
- Finally the two of us were alone/lonely together. •
- He was a cold man, alone/aloof and distant.
- She stayed aloof/alone.
- He was sitting alone/lonely in the room.
- She lives alone and often feels lonely.
- She lives lonely and often feels alone.
Please correct.
- I don’t like going out alone at night.
- He lives alone.
- Finally the two of us were alone together.
- He was a cold man, aloof and distant.
- She stayed aloof.
- He was sitting alone in the room.
- She lives alone and often feels lonely.
(These are the obvious choices. It doesn’t necessarily mean that the other choices are always completely impossible.)
alone is both adverb and adjective;“she lives alone”(adverb), “she is alone”(adjective)
‘Lonely’ is an adjective which should not be used to mean without anyone else;‘Alone’ is used instead: ‘I go out lonely’(wrong) ; ‘I go out alone’(right, alone is an adverb here). ‘Lonely’ is an adjective : a lonely life, a lonely experience…;however in this sentence:“Brian feels lonely.” 'lonely is still an adjective which is used after a ‘Linking verb’,as you can use adjectives after linking verbs such as : feel,get,become,look, see,.sound,grow,‘to be’ verbs and the rest.
she feels angry.
I grew impatient.
It sounds terrible.