But I am lonely is saying the same thing as I feel lonely. |
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Yes, and then again, at least for me, no...
I agree that they're close cousins, but I'd tend to use the former for something more long term - closer to a state (how vague all these terms are!) - and the latter for the emotion you're feeling in your solar plexus or whatever:
I live on my own in a cottage at the end of a long lane. I am lonely, but today the sun is shining and...
I wave my daughter off on the train and turn away. Walking through the station I feel lonely, and decide to...
Though actually I tend to avoid 'feel' for this kind of thing - it's a bit tell-y. Though of course it might be right if the narrator is telling the reader about what happened to them earlier.
Emma