词汇 | grammar_british-grammar_hardly |
释义 | HardlyHardly is an adverb. Hardly has a negative meaning. It normally means ‘almost not at all’ or ‘only just’. We can use it in mid position, or before an adjective or a noun:
Hardly any, hardly everWe often use hardly before any, anyone, anybody, anything and ever in negative clauses, but not before no, none, no one, nobody, nothing or never:
Hardly at allWe sometimes use at all after the verb, adjective or noun which follows hardly to give greater emphasis:
Hardly and very little, very fewHardly + any(thing) has a similar meaning to very little or very few:
See also: Little, a little, few, a few Word orderWe usually put hardly in mid position, between the subject and the main verb, or after the modal verb or first auxiliary verb, or after main verb be:
When hardly is modifying either the main verb or the following noun, we can put it directly before the verb or before the noun phrase:
In more formal styles, to refer to something happening immediately after something else, we use hardly … when. We move hardly to front position and invert the subject and verb:
Warning: Hardly is not the adverb form of the adjective hard. The adverb form of hard is also hard. See also: Hard Hardly ever, rarely, scarcely, seldom |
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