Lonelyadjective
Unhappy because of feeling isolated from contact with other people.
Lonelyadjective
Unfrequented by people; desolate.
Lonelyadjective
Without companions; solitary.
Lonelyadjective
Sequestered from company or neighbors; solitary; retired; as, a lonely situation; a lonely cell.
Lonelyadjective
Alone, or in want of company; forsaken.
Lonelyadjective
Not frequented by human beings; as, a lonely wood.
Lonelyadjective
Having a feeling of depression or sadness resulting from the consciousness of being alone; lonesome.
Lonelyadjective
lacking companions or companionship;
Lonelyadjective
marked by dejection from being alone;
Lonelyadjective
separated from or unfrequented by others; remote or secluded;
Lonelyadjective
enjoyed or performed alone;
Lonelyadjective
sad because one has no friends or company
Lonelyadjective
without companions; solitary
Lonelyadjective
(of a place) unfrequented and remote
Lonesomeadjective
Unhappy due to being alone; lonely.
Lonesomenoun
(informal) Oneself alone.
Lonesomeadjective
Secluded from society; not frequented by human beings; solitary.
Lonesomeadjective
Conscious of, and somewhat depressed by, solitude; as, to feel lonesome.
Lonesomeadjective
being the only one; single and isolated from others;
Lonesomeadjective
marked by dejection from being alone;
Lonesome
Lonesome is a 1928 American comedy drama part-talkie film directed by Paul Fejös, and starring Barbara Kent and Glenn Tryon. Its plot follows two working-class residents of New York City over a 24-hour-period, during which they have a chance meeting at Coney Island during the Independence Day weekend and swiftly fall in love with one another.