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Mon Feb 25, 2008 8:12 am Usage of barely, hardly, scarcely |
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Hi nobody
Yes, you can use any of the three. . _________________ Amy
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ESL teacher, translator, and a native speaker of American English |
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Yankee I'm a Communicator ;-)

Joined: 16 Apr 2006 Posts: 7464 Location: Northeast US
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Mon Feb 25, 2008 11:13 am Usage of barely, hardly, scarcely |
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Hi Nobody,
I think of the three I would plump for 'barely' as the most appropriate in your sentence. It gives the idea of not really being able to speak.
Alan _________________ English as a Second Language You can read my ESL story A Rhapsody of Words |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 7278 Location: UK
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Mon Feb 25, 2008 14:31 pm Usage of barely, hardly, scarcely |
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Hi Yankee, thank you for your answer.
Hi Alan, Thank you for your answer as well. Why do you think 'hardly' and 'scarcely' are less appropriate here? Don't they both mean the same as 'barely' in the sentence? i.e. don't they both also give the idea of not really being able to speak?
Thanks in advance |
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nobody I'm new here and I like it ;-)
Joined: 18 Feb 2008 Posts: 18
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Tue Feb 26, 2008 23:56 pm Usage of barely, hardly, scarcely |
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Personally, nobody, I'd say "he has a sore throat and can hardly speak". "Barely" to me suggests he can speak, but not very well. "Hardly" suggest he can't speak much at all.
I would never say "scarcely" with that sentence because, although it means pretty much the same thing in the dictionary, has a slightly different usage. For example, food can be 'scarce' meaning there is not much of it. I would not say "food was hardly" or "hard". Although I'm not sure why. :S
I hope that helps... |
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glitterfairy25 New Member
Joined: 26 Feb 2008 Posts: 8
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| Question frame (grammar) | past vs former |