Easy Word | Luyện ngữ pháp


Luyện ngữ pháp - English Grammar in Use - Intermediate ((Unit 101: Adjectives and adverbs 2))


A

Good/well

Good is an adjective. The adverb is well:
  • Your English is goodbut You speak English well.
  • Susan is a good pianist. but Susan plays the piano well.

 

We use well (not good) with past participles (dressed/known etc.): well-dressedwell-knownwell-educatedwell-paid
  • Gary's father is a well-known writer.

 

But well is also an adjective with the meaning 'in good health':
  • 'How are you today?'   'I'm very well, thanks.'
B

Fast/hard/late

These words are both adjectives and adverbs:
adjective adverb
Darren is a very fast runner. Darren can run very fast.
Kate is a hard worker. Kate works hard. (not works hardly)
I was late. got up late this morning.

Lately = recently:
  • Have you seen Tom lately?
C

Hardly

Hardly = very little, almost not. Study these examples:
  • Sarah wasn't very friendly at the party. She hardly spoke to me.
    (= she spoke to me very little, almost not at all)
  • We've only met once or twice. We hardly know each other.

Hard and hardly are different. Compare:
  • He tried hard to find a job, but he had no luck. (= he tried a lot, with a lot of effort)
  • I'm not surprised he didn't find a job. He hardly tried. (= he tried very little)

 

can hardly do something = it's very difficult for me, almost impossible:
  • Your writing is terrible. I can hardly read it. (= it is almost impossible to read it)
  • My leg was hurting. I could hardly walk.
D You can use hardly any/anybody/anyone/anything/anywhere:
  • A: How much money have we got?
    B: Hardly any. (= very little, almost none)
  • These two cameras are very similar. There's hardly any difference between them.
  • The exam results were very bad. Hardly anybody in our class passed. (= very few students passed)

Note that you can say:
  • She said hardly anythingor She hardly said anything.
  • We've got hardly any money. or We've hardly got any money.

 

Hardly ever = almost never:
  • I'm nearly always at home in the evenings. I hardly ever go out.

 

Hardly also means 'certainly not'. For example:
  • It's hardly surprising that you're tired. You haven't slept for three days.
    (= it's certainly not surprising)
  • The situation is serious, but it's hardly a crisis. (= it's certainly not a crisis)


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