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  1. Dictionary
    hardly
    /ˈhɑːdli/

    adverb

    • 1. scarcely (used to qualify a statement by saying that it is true to an insignificant degree): "the little house in which he lived was hardly bigger than a hut" Similar scarcelybarelyonly justnot muchOpposite fully
    • 2. harshly: archaic "the rule worked hardly"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Grammar. Hardly is an adverb. … Hardly ever, rarely, scarcely, seldom. 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.

  3. The meaning of HARDLY is —used to emphasize a minimal amount or degree. How to use hardly in a sentence. Can hardly be used with a negative?: Usage Guide

  4. Hardly, though often interchangeable with scarcely and barely, usually emphasizes the idea of the difficulty involved: We could hardly endure the winter. Barely emphasizes the narrowness of the margin of safety, “only just and no more”: We barely succeeded.

  5. hardly, though often interchangeable with scarcely and barely, usually emphasizes the idea of the difficulty involved: We could hardly endure the winter. barely emphasizes the narrowness of the margin of safety, “only just and no more”: We barely succeeded. scarcely implies a very narrow margin, below satisfactory performance: He can ...

  6. Grammar. Hardly is an adverb. … Hardly ever, rarely, scarcely, seldom. 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.

  7. Hardly is an adverb meaning ‘almost not’: I hardly ever go to concerts. I can hardly wait for my birthday. It cannot be used instead of hard: I’ve been working hardly today. She has thought very hardly about her future plans. It was raining hardly outside.

  8. HARDLY definition: 1. almost not, or only a very small amount: 2. used to emphasize that you think something is not…. Learn more.

  9. The adverb hardly means barely or scarcely at all. If you hardly ever visit your cousins in California, it means you almost never travel to see them. If you hardly know your neighbor, you only know him a little bit, and if you hardly understand what your French teacher says, you're only catching every few words she speaks.

  10. 1. scarcely; barely: we hardly knew the family. 2. just; only just: he could hardly hold the cup.

  11. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English hard‧ly /ˈhɑːdli $ ˈhɑːrdli/ S2 W2 adverb 1 almost not My parents divorced when I was six, and I hardly knew my father. The children were so excited they could hardly speak. I can hardly believe it. Hardly anyone (=almost no one) writes to me these days.