Reverse Dictionary: SOLITARY

ADJECTIVES
..900 — ONLEPY solitary; single, unmarried → obs.
1000 — ONLY one, without companions or society; solitary, lonely → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1205 — ELENGE remote, lonely, solitary; dreary, miserable → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1305 — ELENGELY solitary, cheerless, miserable, dejected → obs.
1382 — SINGULAR alone; away from others; solitary
1572 — BURD-ALONE as a solitary person or being; entirely alone → Sc. obs.
1611 — DEAFLY — DEAVELY lonely, solitary and silent → Eng. dial.
1656 — SOLITANEOUS solitary, alone, without company → obs.
1660 — MARROWLESS companionless, solitary → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1667 — SAVAGE remote from society; solitary → obs.
1691 — ELLINGE — HELANGE solitary, lonely; dreary, weird, uncanny → Eng. dial.
1724 — WAFF of persons and places: forlorn, melancholy; solitary, said of one who is in a strange place where he has not a single acquaintance → Sc.
1781 — DALY lonely, solitary → Eng. dial. obs.
1802 — MISSLIE solitary, lonely from the absence of anything → Sc.
1824 — DERN dark, dreary, dismal, lonely, solitary → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1921 — ALONE of a person, place, etc.: isolated, lonely, solitary → colloq.

ADVERBS
1844 — ANERLY — YANNERLY alone, lonely, solitary → Sc. & Eng. dial.

NOUNS
1340 — ONEHEAD the condition of being alone; solitude → obs.
1340 — ONLINESS the fact or condition of being alone; solitariness, solitude → obs.
1382 — ONLIHEDE solitude, solitariness → obs.
1398 — SINGULARITY a being alone or apart from others; solitariness → obs.
1805 — SINGLENESS the fact of standing alone; solitude, solitariness, isolation
1814 — SINGULARITY a solitary instance → obs.
1888 — ANNESSE loneliness, solitude → obs. (Bk.)
1991 — AUTOMANIA an excessive liking for solitude (Bk.)

NOUNS, PERSON
1867 — OLD BACHELOR a confirmed bachelor; a solitary or reclusive rustic; a hermit  → Amer. dial.
1876 — DICK SMITH a lone drinker, a drink taken alone; one who does not buy drinks for others, or who depends on others to buy them; a stingy or solitary person → . Amer. dial.
1892 — CIMARRON a wild or solitary person; a shy, bashful child → Amer. dial.
1899 — OLD BATCH a confirmed bachelor; a solitary or reclusive rustic; a hermit  → Amer. dial.
1907 — LOBO WOLF n. a solitary person, a loner; an outcast → Amer. dial.
1939 — LOBO a solitary person, a loner; an outcast → Amer. dial.
1944 — V-8 a solitary woman who prefers her own company to that of others, esp. of men → African-American sl.
1967 — HANKY a person who doesn’t seem to ‘fit in’ or who doesn’t get along very well → Amer. dial.

PHRASES
1845 — LIKE A SHAG ON A ROCK denoting the isolation or unhappiness associated with solitude, on one’s own → Aust. sl.