词汇 | grammar_british-grammar_hardly-ever-rarely-scarcely-seldom | ||||||||
释义 | Hardly ever, rarely, scarcely, seldomFrequency adverbs meaning ‘not very often’Hardly ever, rarely, scarcely and seldom are frequency adverbs. We can use them to refer to things that almost never happen, or do not happen very often. They have a negative meaning. We use them without not. Rarely, scarcely and seldom are more common in writing than in speaking:
[a trout is a type of fish]
Hardly and scarcely meaning ‘almost not at all’Hardly and scarcely can mean ‘almost not at all’ or ‘only just’. Hardly is much more common than scarcely, and scarcely is more formal:
Word orderWe usually put these adverbs in mid position, between the subject and main verb, after the modal verb or first auxiliary verb, or after main verb be. In more formal styles, we put them in front position and invert the subject and verb. If there is no auxiliary or modal verb, we use do/does/did. Compare
See also: Often Sometimes or sometime? Never or not … ever? In more formal styles, to refer to something happening immediately after something else, we use scarcely/hardly … when. We move hardly and scarcely to front position and invert the subject and verb:
See also: Hardly |
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