The SETTLER felt lonely on the frontier and longed for LETTERS from home
I'm so lonely. That dog is lonely! I'm not lonely..
Both are correct, but they have slightly different connotations. "Feeling lonely" implies a sense of emotional isolation, while "feeling alone" suggests a physical state of being by oneself.
Her friend, Jack was a lonely farmer.
To herself, she was a very lonely woman.
A common usage would be "I'm feeling lonely." A bit more verbose, "Mark felt lonely when he couldn't visit any of his friends."
Not exactly, although I guess it depends on what you have before it.
Swindlers often target vulnerable people such as the elderly and the lonely.
The elderly woman lived alone in her cottage, earning the reputation of being the town's spinster.
The little girl had been feeling lonely since her best friend moved to another city.
In this sentence there are two adjectives and two nouns. The first pair is "lonely man." "Lonely" is the adjective describing the noun "man." The second pair is "dilapidated house," where the noun "house" is described by the adjective "dilapidated."
No, vowels are the letters "a, e, i, o, u" the letter "y" is a consonant.
He is a lifelong conman who managed to bamboozle lonely, wealthy widows out of millions.