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Hans51 Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

'alone time' or 'lonely time'

I have seen 'alone time' and then is there a meaning difference between 'lonely time' and what is the speech part of alone in this sentence?

'I like to spend time alone.'

Here alone is an adverb, right? Or it modifies time behind like time which is alone?

What do you native English speakers think? Thank you so much as usual in advance!
  

Top answer

If you want some alone time, you want to be on your own. If that is what you want, then you will not be lonely.

  • If you want some alone time, you want to be on your own.
  • If that is what you want, then you will not be lonely.
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1 Answers
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If you want some alone time, you want to be on your own. If that is what you want, then you will not be lonely.

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