I don't like sports and hardly ever watch them either live or on the telly.
This has to be the easiest answer, ever
Coins are minted by impressing a design into a piece of metal. I hardly noticed her yesterday, but she sure is impressing me now!
Hardly ever.
Yes, sure. e.g Rudy is one of the most impatient person I have ever met.
That was the greatest thing I've ever seen. His was the greatest act of sacrifice anyone had heard of.
Hardly any of the kids brought money to school with them.
I can hardly hear you over the noise of the traffic outside.
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.
Hardly a sound was coming from the house, so they were sure nobody was in.
Your name.
she was so emaciated she could hardly stand
The fire hardly thwarted it, however the case was Inconceivable.
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.
The rickety old bridge hardly looked stable.
Don't assume he's perfect when you hardly even know him.
Hardly ever.
We could hardly see the rock as it fell down the elevator shaft.