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  • Asked on December 24, 2021 in Grammar.

    If you are in a college, Barely and Any can fit perfectly in a sentence. Barely described something that is possible but with difficulty or as in the example below, almost doesn’t happen. What is an adverb? Any on the other hand indicates an amount. Is Determiner? Are these two different things?

      n, in a way that, of course, almost does not happen, or really exist. She barely acknowledged his presence. I thought there was barely anything smell. Is that bad chemistry?  

    https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.ca/. Which

    are my predictions since I don’t speak English language like Google or Apple has me studying English so why do you use that word, and I’m probably doing it incorrectly?

    1. Every day I’m spending time with my friends.

    In the first sentence you almost automatically put an emphasis on the fact that you, now, have almost no one you can call “friends.” In the second sentence there is less emphasis on this fact. Personally, if I are

    wrong but I get it please correct me?

    • 259772 views
    • 2 answers
    • 95864 votes
  • Asked on December 24, 2021 in Grammar.

    If you are in a college, Barely and Any can fit perfectly in a sentence. Barely described something that is possible but with difficulty or as in the example below, almost doesn’t happen. What is an adverb? Any on the other hand indicates an amount. Is Determiner? Are these two different things?

      n, in a way that, of course, almost does not happen, or really exist. She barely acknowledged his presence. I thought there was barely anything smell. Is that bad chemistry?  

    https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.ca/. Which

    are my predictions since I don’t speak English language like Google or Apple has me studying English so why do you use that word, and I’m probably doing it incorrectly?

    1. Every day I’m spending time with my friends.

    In the first sentence you almost automatically put an emphasis on the fact that you, now, have almost no one you can call “friends.” In the second sentence there is less emphasis on this fact. Personally, if I are

    wrong but I get it please correct me?

    • 259772 views
    • 2 answers
    • 95864 votes