['sɔlitərinis]
solitariness如何读
solitariness英汉释义
- 单独的;独居的;无伴的 being alone;single;lonesome
- 唯一的 only one
- 人迹罕至的;幽静的 seldom visited
solitariness是什么意思
- 单独的,独自的
- 唯一的,单个的,仅有的
- 孤独的,寂寞的
- 荒凉的,偏僻的,僻远的
- 独居的
- 隐居的
- 【动】非群居的
- 【植】单生的
- 无伴的, 独个儿的
- 冷落的
- 独居者
- 隐士
- 单独监禁,单独禁闭
- 过孤独生活的人
solitariness词根
词根:solo
adj.solitary 孤独的;独居的
solo 独奏的;独唱的;单独的
adv.solo 单独地
solitarily 寂寞地;独自一人地
n.solitude 孤独;隐居;荒僻的地方
solitary 独居者;隐士
solo 独奏;独唱;独奏曲
vi.solo 单独表演;放单飞
vt.solo 单人攀登;单独驾
solitariness英英释义
- confinement of a prisoner in isolation from other prisoners;
"he was held in solitary"
- one who lives in solitude
- characterized by or preferring solitude;
"a lone wolf"
"a lonely existence"
"a man of a solitary disposition"
"a solitary walk" - of plants and animals; not growing or living in groups or colonies;
"solitary bees"
- lacking companions or companionship;
"he was alone when we met him"
"she is alone much of the time"
"the lone skier on the mountain"
"a lonely fisherman stood on a tuft of gravel"
"a lonely soul"
"a solitary traveler" - being the only one; single and isolated from others;
"the lone doctor in the entire county"
"a lonesome pine"
"an only child"
"the sole heir"
"the sole example"
"a solitary instance of cowardice"
"a solitary speck in the sky" - devoid of creatures;
"a lonely crossroads"
"a solitary retreat"
"a trail leading to an unfrequented lake"
solitariness词源英文解释
Adjective Middle English, solitarie, from Anglo-French, from Latin solitarius, from solitas aloneness, from solus alone
The first known use of solitary was in the 14th century
solitariness儿童词典英英释义
solubilitynoun
the quality or state of being soluble
the amount of a substance that will dissolve in a given amount of another substance
solsticenoun
the point in the apparent path of the sun at which the sun is farthest north or south of the equator
the time of the sun's passing a solstice which occurs on June 22nd and on December 22nd
solonnoun
a wise and skillful giver of a collection of laws
a member of a legislative body
soloistnoun
one who performs a solo
solo1 of 3noun
or plural soliˈsō-lē a piece of music written to be performed by one voice or one instrument
an action in which there is only one performer
solo2 of 3adverb or adjective
without a companion : alone
solo3 of 3verb
to perform by oneselfespecially: to fly an airplane without one's instructor
solitudenoun
the quality or state of being alone or far-off from society : seclusion, loneliness
a lonely place (as a desert)
solitary1 of 2adjective
all alone
a solitary traveler
seldom visited : lonely
being the only one : sole
solitary example
growing or living alone : not forming part of a group or cluster the solitary wasps
flowers at the end of the stalk and solitary
solitary2 of 2noun
one who lives or seeks to live a solitary life : recluse, hermit
solitariness 例句
1 A solitary light burned dimly in the hall.
大厅里点着一盏孤灯,发出昏暗的光。
2 "He is dead!" she cried, in a tone o' heart-piercing solitariness and sorrow, as she accompanied them into the house, where she had beheld them equip themselves for battle.
3 When she had nearly reached its height, she discerned that the fates had seemingly resolved to punish her for her love of solitariness, by decreeing that her chosen retreat should that day be occupied.
4 According to the zoo's announcement, that's because Baird's tapirs are typically solitary.
5 The prisoner was kept in solitary.
6 The space is probably best entered alone, so as to be immersed in simulated solitariness.
7 But in the solitariness of his den, with an overhead fan slicing through dead air, Mr. Greene sees a vast injustice.
8 Alfred Kazin, in “God and the American Writer,” stressed an “American tradition of unavailing solitude,” and quoted the philosopher Alfred North Whitehead: “Religion is what man does with his solitariness.”
9 “It’s set up to address solitariness, but you won’t find people saying they are coming for that reason.”
10 weary of European civilization, the painter Paul Gauguin famously abandoned France to become a solitary in the South Seas
11 We felt, in a peculiar manner, the solitariness of the wilderness.
12 There were five cells on my corridor but it was all about silence and solitariness … The worst moment was one day when I was locked in a room alone with a male interrogator.
13 Eleven o'clock.—Saw a Cockney "gent" on a walking tour, the first of the sort that I have seen in these parts, and he looked frightened at the solitariness of the scene.
14 Nowhere were the guides visible, and in another moment there was a curious sense of solitariness as I battled with the obstacles, aided in no small degree by the rope.
15 He must enter the true holiest place and stand in awful solitariness above the heavens of worlds and angels in the immediate presence of God.
16 The percussive track simmers in solitary sorrow as the musician dives simultaneously into the darkest depths of his mind and the bottom of a bottle.
17 But an increased solitariness came upon her as she thought of that cold rigid face lying under the turf far away in Switzerland—the face of the only relative left to her.
18 This is the story of two lost souls who, after years of stoic solitariness, unexpectedly find love — not the sudden, transformative passion of romantic movies but hard-won trust and tenderness that grow slowly over time.
19 Most cats are solitary creatures.
20 I enjoyed the discipline and solitariness of long-distance running, which allowed me to escape from the hurly-burly of school life.