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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Solitarily

Solitarily \Sol"i*ta*ri*ly\, adv. In a solitary manner; in solitude; alone.
--Mic. vii. 14.

Wiktionary
solitarily

adv. In a solitary manner; alone.

WordNet
solitarily

adv. in solitude; "a hermit chooses to live solitarily"

Usage examples of "solitarily".

In reality, however, it was the OMBU, which grows solitarily on the Argentine plains.

She was looking forward to the day with that mixture of eagerness and withholding which we have as we draw nigh the disenchanting termination of an enchanting romance, when Sir Willoughby met her on a Sunday morning, as she crossed his park solitarily to church.

As there was no use in being argumentative on a subject affording him personally, and apparently solitarily, refreshment and enjoyment, Vernon resolved to keep it to himself.

The scene is almost spooky: a tall, unfinished tower looming solitarily on a dusty plain.

Some of the rows along the back wall loomed in stacks that almost reached the ceiling, other boxes set solitarily around her feet.

Even that commerce was but occasional, and through three-fourths of its rising tides the dirty indecorous drab of a river would come solitarily oozing and lapping at the rusty ring, as if it had heard of the Doge and the Adriatic, and wanted to be married to the great conserver of its filthiness, the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor.

Never since his youth had Klein been left so starkly and so solitarily to his emotions.

Therefore, on the day when this plan, slowly and solitarily ripened, shall break forth, it will break forth with all the conditions of success which always accompany an unforeseen event.

For a little while he hears their footsteps and then he hears nothing at all, hangs at the center of the forest solitarily, feeling abandoned.

Brandon told of many isles, some with friendly folk and some where dwelt enchanters to be feared, and some where worshipful priests dwelt, solitarily praising God, and clothed only hi a weave of their long gray hair.

There were one or two young noblemen and others, for whom he felt a great regard, a high esteem, a certain degree of habitual affection, but that was all, and thus his time in general passed solitarily enough.

But Jean Merle was living, and might continue to live another twenty years or more, thus solitarily and monotonously.

Lord John believes this man holds the strings, which when twitched, will pull certain small and solitarily ineffectual secret societies into an effective, coherent movement.

There was Borrow, who, as an old man, was tramping solitarily in the fields of Norfolk, as earlier he wandered alone in wild Wales or wilder Spain.

New Orleans, and the name had made its way down through several rings of cousins before alighting, solitarily, on Marie.