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Loneliness   /lˈoʊnlinəs/   Listen
noun
Loneliness  n.  
1.
The condition of being lonely; solitude; seclusion.
2.
The state of being unfrequented by human beings; as, the loneliness of a road.
3.
Love of retirement; disposition to solitude. "I see The mystery of your loneliness."
4.
A feeling of depression resulting from being alone.
Synonyms: Solitude; seclusion. See Solitude.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Loneliness" Quotes from Famous Books



... only be when she was growing old that she would feel the loneliness of knowing that, apart from the passion which she had inspired because of her sex and her beauty, not a single human being had ever loved her. For the present she was Venus Victrix, a glorious creature, the desired of ...
— Halcyone • Elinor Glyn

... stars was in striking contrast with the sameness of the white and deathlike desert. A profound melancholy took hold of me. I had ceased to fear, almost to think, my perceptions were blinded by excitement and fatigue, my spirits oppressed by an unspeakable sense of loneliness and helplessness, and the awful silence, intensified rather than relieved by the long drawn moaning of the unseen ocean, which, however far I might be from it, ...
— Mr. Fortescue • William Westall

... with bricks in the outskirts of a town twilight was falling. A star or two appeared over the smoke, and distant windows lit mysterious lights. The stillness deepened and the loneliness. Then all the outcast things that are silent ...
— A Dreamer's Tales • Lord Dunsany [Edward J. M. D. Plunkett]

... of extreme loneliness. As its weird, half-availing notes ring out and are answered back from the distant rocks shrouded in night, and perhaps concealing the lurking foe, the soldier remembers that he is far away from home and friends—deep in the enemy's country, encompassed on every hand by those in deadly ...
— Andersonville, complete • John McElroy

... instinctively feels ought to be for her the better task. She knows the standards and conditions are a matter of chance; that, while she may receive considerate treatment in one place, in another there will be no apparent consciousness that she is a human being. She knows and dreads the loneliness of the average "place." "It's breaking my heart I was," sobbed an intelligent Irish girl, serving a term for drunkenness begun in the kitchen, "alone all day long with never a one to pass a good word." ...
— The Business of Being a Woman • Ida M. Tarbell


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