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  1. Apr 5, 2011 · As already pointed out, the word "seldom" is mainly an adverb, even though it can be used as an adjective in some cases. And although "seldom" may be seldom in every day language, "seldomly" occurs even more seldom. This stands in contrast to the word "often", which in relation to "seldom" is used very often.

  2. Nov 29, 2010 · "Rarely" and "seldom" are synonymous and interchangeable, used to indicate low frequency. "Hardly" is not used to indicate infrequency (unless you say "hardly ever," which is synonymous with the other two) but rather the extent of a quality, as it is synonymous with "barely." For example: The light was hardly visible.

  3. Mar 26, 2017 · A search for seldom of the massive EnTenTen 2013 web corpus in Sketch Engine yields 172,000 or so occurrences, compared to 733 cases of seldomly. In my judgement, while comparatively infrequent, seldomly cannot therefore be said to be "unacceptable." However, because it is relatively rare and recent it is likely to invite criticism or even ...

  4. Dec 1, 2022 · I prefer rarely over seldom in the sense of improbable at any one instance in time, particularly when you are taking a global perspective on the set. If you use seldom in the same sentence - Electric cars seldom make economic sense - it has the perspective of considering each case one-by-one, which happens over time, at least metaphorically.

  5. However, as noted at that question, hardly is a strange word, and in particular, I suddenly have cause to wonder how hardly (and its compatriots in strangeness, rarely and seldom) work with tag questions and agreements. Beyond the stated links (and some of the links out from those), however, I have found precious little information on dealing with these words, and precisely nothing on how they affect tag questions and responses.

  6. Aug 25, 2017 · Grammatically it is correct. As these are. Often I am wrong. Sometimes I am wrong. Frequently I am wrong. But inverted word order is also correct.

  7. Dec 22, 2015 · @phoog Sure, I agree it is a possibility. Of course the longer version being an adaptation of the shorter is also possible. Wikitionary suggests that "fools seldom differ" is usually a comeback of sorts. I.E. One guy says "great minds think alike" and another (probably the other agreeing party) says "more like fools seldom differ." –

  8. Dec 4, 2018 · Rarely: X rarely goes to Y Frequently: X frequently goes to Y What would be a word in between the two? A formal word for 'sometimes' maybe? Context: Atheists sometimes appeal to Nietzsc...

  9. Dec 14, 2012 · In math, I just learned that when performing subtraction, the terms for each number are as follows: minuend − subtrahend = difference I have never heard of minuend and subtrahend before, and I'm

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