Separately, in regard to space or company; in a state of separation.
1 However, someone who's perhaps slightly aloof will be more approachable after today!
2 It is also somewhat aloof - one bloom per stem, one stem per plant.
3 The Party leader, aloof and amused, gave Young the signal to begin.
4 In Peloponnesus, the powerful city of Argos and the Achaeans stood aloof .
5 Meanwhile, Canney's idea of Moss as aloof from English art has stuck.
6 I feel like I did during orientation week-anxious ,outof place, aloof .
7 Yet the theatre in England remains almost entirely aloof from real life.
8 Perhaps the Days saw themselves as enlightened, standing aloof from that paradox.
9 However, someone rather aloof and enigmatic is likely to catch your eye.
10 He returned it, still aloof , and said, There ain't any visitor's parking.
11 The previous administration of George W. Bush stood aloof from the body.
12 He's intensely thoughtful about the whole thing, and private, and quite aloof .
13 He was better liked than du Tancret but considered cold and aloof .
14 From the anguish of the day before he held himself carefully aloof .
15 These all held themselves quite aloof from the masses of the people.
16 The Society itself, however, kept aloof from the battle of the journals.
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Aloof across language varieties