alone/lonely

  1. I don’t like going out alone/lonely at night.
  2. He lives alone/lonely.
  3. Finally the two of us were alone/lonely together. •
  4. He was a cold man, alone/aloof and distant.
  5. She stayed aloof/alone.
  6. He was sitting alone/lonely in the room.
  7. She lives alone and often feels lonely.
  8. She lives lonely and often feels alone.
    Please correct.
  1. I don’t like going out alone at night.
  2. He lives alone.
  3. Finally the two of us were alone together.
  4. He was a cold man, aloof and distant.
  5. She stayed aloof.
  6. He was sitting alone in the room.
  7. 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.