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  1. Hardly and scarcely can mean ‘almost not at all’ or ‘only just’. Hardly is much more common than scarcely, and scarcely is more formal: Jen was so tired. She could scarcely keep her eyes open. I hardly know them. I’ve only met them once.

  2. hardly / scarcely / barely ... when. no sooner ... than. When a story is told in the past tense, the adverbials hardly, scarcely, barely and no sooner are often used to emphasise that one event quickly followed another. The verb describing the earlier event is usually in the past perfect tense.

  3. 24 de may. de 2024 · ¿Cómo se usan los adverbios barely, hardly, rarely, scarcely, seldom en inglés? - Easy Learning English Grammar in Spanish. Puntos principales. Un broad negative es un adverbio que transforma el sentido de una declaración afirmativa casi en una negación.

  4. Hardly, barely, scarcely, no sooner. These adverbials often refer to an event which quickly follows another in the past and are usually used with past perfect. Hardly, scarcely and barely are followed by when in the contrasting clause, and no sooner is followed by than.

  5. ¿Cómo se usan los adverbios barely, hardly, rarely, scarcely, seldom en inglés? - Gramática inglesa en español. Puntos principales. Un broad negative es un adverbio que transforma el sentido de una declaración afirmativa casi en una negación.

  6. Hardly and scarcely can mean ‘almost not at all’ or ‘only just’. Hardly is much more common than scarcely, and scarcely is more formal: Jen was so tired. She could scarcely keep her eyes open. I hardly know them. I’ve only met them once.

  7. Only just; hence, not quite, hardly, scarcely, with difficulty. Hardly. Barely, only just; almost not; not quite; scarcely. Because of their other meanings, a corpus search is not entirely reliable. However, the Corpus of Contemporary American English shows the two words as being almost equally as frequent as each other, whereas the British ...