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Ahn Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

hardly mean anything

'It means virtually nothing'

Can it be replaced by 'It hardly means anything'?
  

Top answer

Yes. They mean virtually the same thing. There is hardly any difference (between the two).

  • Yes.
  • They mean virtually the same thing.
  • There is hardly any difference (between the two).
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6 Answers
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Yes. They mean virtually the same thing. There is hardly any difference (between the two).
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Thank you, Dr Nick Riviera.
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Thank you for the thank you, Ahn. ?? :-)
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Do you know Korean? It's amazing!

?? ????^^;
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?????????:-) ????
I love the way Hangu looks! (but it's better we continue our chat elsewhere)

Good health :-) :-) :-)
Dr Nick :-)
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Oh, you are an Australian living in Japan? Sounds great.Emotion: smile

I'm also interested in Japanese culture very much. I just watched

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