The author may have ended the chapter with "And hardly anything was green" to emphasize the harsh and desolate environment of the setting. This sentence could symbolize the lack of life, hope, and growth in the characters' surroundings, highlighting the challenges they face.
Famish is to suffer severely from hunger. Example sentence: He was famished since he had hardly eaten anything in two days.
I've hardly begun to explain my story!
(you just did haha) i can hardly breath
The stain on his shirt was hardly noticeable, but he changed it anyway.
Yes, hardly is an adverb, a word to describe a verb or an adjective.She hardly knew what to say.They had hardly started the ceremony before the rain came.
Hardly any of the kids brought money to school with them.
I could hardly hear the music over the loud chatter in the room.
No, the word 'hardly' is an adverb, a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.Example functions:He hardly touched his dinner.The adverb 'hardly' modifies the verb 'touched'.The noun in the sentence is 'dinner', a word for a thing.Maggie is hardly new at this.The adverb 'hardly' modifies the adjective 'new'.The noun in the sentence is 'Maggie", a word for a person.This city is hardly ever quiet.The adverb 'hardly' modifies the adverb 'ever'.The noun in the sentence is 'city', a word for a place.
There is no such adverbial pair "hardly when" -- as an adverb of degree, hardly modifies adjectives, not adverbs. When it modifies verbs, it can also mean heavily.Examples:The trail hardly seemed dangerous. The climb was hardly difficult for the soldiers.The rhino landed hardly on its side and we worried that it may have been injured.You might use the two words separately in a sentence: We had hardly started when the rain began.
it is A Nobody hardly never sees them here.
Hardly a sound was coming from the house, so they were sure nobody was in.
I don't like sports and hardly ever watch them either live or on the telly.