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hardly
[hahrd-lee]
adverb
only just; almost not; barely.
We had hardly reached the lake when it started raining. hardly any; hardly ever.
not at all; scarcely.
That report is hardly surprising.
with little likelihood.
He will hardly come now.
forcefully or vigorously.
with pain or difficulty.
British., harshly or severely.
hard.
hardly
/ ˈhɑːdlɪ /
adverb
scarcely; barely
we hardly knew the family
just; only just
he could hardly hold the cup
ironic, almost or probably not or not at all
he will hardly incriminate himself
with difficulty or effort
rare, harshly or cruelly
Usage
Word History and Origins
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The Vikings’ strategy was hardly an original one.
A former ICE official, who asked not to be named out of fear of retaliation, said that in prior years the U.S. attorney’s office “didn’t prosecute hardly anybody” for assault — unless the interaction turned violent.
There is no doubt the quality is there with Isak, so it was hardly a surprise to see him put away such a clever strike like that.
But that hardly means a drop in ability for the state championship.
“Even now,” he wrote from Manhattan, “I can hardly bring myself to cross the bridge.”
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