成语大全网 - 汉语词典 - lone和lonely的区别是什么?

lone和lonely的区别是什么?

lone

[lEJn]

adj.孤独的, 独立的

lone

[lEJn]

adj

孤单的;寂寞的

lone

[lEun]

adj.

孤独的, 无伴的

凄凉的

人迹稀少的, 远僻的

[谑]独身的; 寡居的

lone hand

独行其是的人

(牌戏中的)头家

the L-star state

孤星州(得克萨斯州的别称)

loneness

n.

loner

n.

(=lone wolf)性格孤癖的人; 不合群的动物

见 alone

lone

AHD:[l絥]

D.J.:[loun]

K.K.:[lon]

adj.

Without accompaniment; solitary:

a lone skier on the mountain.

Without companionship; isolated or lonely.

Being the only one; sole:

the lone doctor in the county.

See: single

Situated by itself:

a lone tree on the prairie; a lone blue tile in a white floor.

Middle English

short for alone

*See Also : alone

lone

AHD:[l絥]

D.J.:[loun]

K.K.:[lon]

adj.

Without accompaniment; solitary:

孤独的没有伙伴的;孤独的:

a lone skier on the mountain.

山上一个孤独的滑雪者

Without companionship; isolated or lonely.

孤立的没有伙伴的;孤立的或孤单的

Being the only one; sole:

唯一的只有一个的;单独的:

the lone doctor in the county.

县里唯一的一个医生

See: single

Situated by itself:

单独存在的:

a lone tree on the prairie; a lone blue tile in a white floor.

平原上孤立的一棵树;白地板上唯有的一块蓝瓷砖

Middle English

中古英语

short for alone

alone的简写

*See Also : alone

lonely

[5lEJnlI]

adj.孤独的, 寂寞的, 偏僻的, 人迹罕至的

alone desolate friendless isolated solitary unaccompanied

animated cheerful gay

lonely

(lone + -ly)

[5lEJnlI]

adj

-lier, -liest

孤单的

a lonely life in the tree farm

林场的孤单生活

The lonely old man worked his life away like a work horse.

"这个孤独的老人像牛马一样辛苦地干了一辈子,一直干到死。"

"When his wife amd two little children left him, he was very lonely."

"妻子和两个孩子离他而去后,他很孤独。"

寂寞的

Working as a writer can be a very lonely existence.

当作家会是一种很寂莫的生涯。

无人烟的,荒凉的

"The man wanted to fly to Rockall, a lonely island in the Atlantic Ocean."

这个人要飞往洛卡尔--大西洋上的一个孤岛。

alone desolate friendless isolated solitary unaccompanied

animated cheerful gay

lonely

[5lEunli]

adj.

孤独的

寂莫的

人迹少的

荒凉的

lonely-lily

adv.

-liness

lonely

n.

见 alone

lonely

AHD:[l絥搇禲

D.J.:[6lounli8]

K.K.:[6lonli]

adj.

lone.li.er; lone.li.est;

Without companions; lone.

Characterized by aloneness; solitary.

Unfrequented by people; desolate:

a lonely crossroads.

Dejected by the awareness of being alone.

See: alone

Producing such dejection:

the loneliest night of the week.

lonelily

loneliness

Henry Bradley, one of the four editors of the Oxford English Dictionary, said 揑t is a truth often overlooked, but not unimportant, that every addition to the resources of a language must in the first instance have been due to an act (though not necessarily to a voluntary or conscious act) of some one person.?In many cases this one person may have been an author, since the first recorded instance of a word is often found in an author's work. Of course, as Bradley warns, this is the first recorded instance; it is possible that a given author picked up the word or sense somewhere else or that these reside undiscovered in an earlier work. In any case it might be a minor relief of our condition the next time we feel lonely to know that the first recorded instance of the word lonely occurs in the works of Shakespeare. The passage appears in Coriolanus (1607-1608) in a speech by Coriolanus to his mother Volumnia:

揗y mother, you wot [know] well/My hazards still have been your solace, and/Believe't not lightly梩hough I go alone,/Like to a lonely dragon, that his fen/Makes fear'd and talk'd of more than seen捆our son/Will or exceed the common or be caught/With cautelous [crafty] baits and practice.? Lonelyhere, of course, has the sense 搒olitary.?The dragon does not feel dejected, or if he does, he does not seem to know how to reach out to others effectively.

lonely

AHD:[l絥搇禲

D.J.:[6lounli8]

K.K.:[6lonli]

adj.

lone.li.er; lone.li.est;

Without companions; lone.

独自的没有伙伴的;单独的

Characterized by aloneness; solitary.

孤独的以独自一人为特征的;孤单的

Unfrequented by people; desolate:

人迹罕至的;荒凉的:

a lonely crossroads.

荒凉的十字路口

Dejected by the awareness of being alone.

寂寞的因意识到独自一人而沮丧的

See: alone

Producing such dejection:

感到寂寞的引起这种沮丧的:

the loneliest night of the week.

这周最孤独的一个晚上

lonelily

loneliness

Henry Bradley, one of the four editors of the Oxford English Dictionary, said 揑t is a truth often overlooked, but not unimportant, that every addition to the resources of a language must in the first instance have been due to an act (though not necessarily to a voluntary or conscious act) of some one person.?In many cases this one person may have been an author, since the first recorded instance of a word is often found in an author's work. Of course, as Bradley warns, this is the first recorded instance; it is possible that a given author picked up the word or sense somewhere else or that these reside undiscovered in an earlier work. In any case it might be a minor relief of our condition the next time we feel lonely to know that the first recorded instance of the word lonely occurs in the works of Shakespeare. The passage appears in Coriolanus (1607-1608) in a speech by Coriolanus to his mother Volumnia:

牛津英语词典的四位编纂者之一亨利·布莱德雷说:“人们经常忽视这样一个现实,但它并非不重要,那就是对某种语言词汇的每一次添加都首先是由于某一个人的行为(尽管不一定是自愿的或有意识的行为)”。许多时候,这一个人可能是个作者,因为一个词有记载的首次使用往往出自一位作者的作品。当然,正如布莱德雷所提醒人们的,这是首次 有记载的的例子;某个作者可能是从别处学到这个词或这个意思,或是这个词或意思在更早的作品中已经出现,只是未被人们发现。不管怎样,当我们知道 lonely这个词的有记载的首次使用出现在莎士比亚的作品中时,这些都不大能减轻我们的沮丧心情。在 卡里奥拉纳斯(1607-1608年)中,卡里奥拉纳斯对他母亲弗罗姆尼娅讲的一段话中有这样的文字:

揗y mother, you wot [know] well/My hazards still have been your solace, and/Believe't not lightly梩hough I go alone,/Like to a lonely dragon, that his fen/Makes fear'd and talk'd of more than seen捆our son/Will or exceed the common or be caught/With cautelous [crafty] baits and practice.? Lonelyhere, of course, has the sense 搒olitary.?The dragon does not feel dejected, or if he does, he does not seem to know how to reach out to others effectively.

“我的母亲,你清楚地知道/我的冒险一直是你的安慰,而且/不要轻信——尽管我要只身前往,/就象去面对一条 孤单的龙,他的沼泽/令人谈而色变,尽管并未亲见——你的儿子/决意或是胜过凡人或是被狡猾的圈套和手段擒捉”。 Lonely在这里的意思当然是“孤单的”。 龙不会感到沮丧,即便它感到沮丧,他也不太可能知道如何让别人体会到它的感情