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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

I [barely] know her, and....

Alexander: Who are you looking at?
Joshua: That girl over there who's holding a book.
Alexander: She looks like your type. Why don't you go talk to her.
Joshua: I don't know. I barely know her, and....

I'd like to know why "barely" is used, not "never."
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

Because 'barely' makes sense and 'never' doesn't.

  • Because 'barely' makes sense and 'never' doesn't.
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7 Answers
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Because 'barely' makes sense and 'never' doesn't.
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Thank you, fivejedjon, for your kind answer. Emotion: smile
Then I'd like to know if you think Joshua has little knowledge of her.
If not,
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Barely, scarcely and hardly are all possible. They all mean that a situation is only just true.

You could say I never (= at no time in the past) knew her, but never makes no sense with present-tense know.
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Thank you, fivejedjon, for your continuing support. Emotion: smile
I have seen "never" used in the future tense and present perfect tense.
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You can use it with the present tense with verbs suggesting actions or states that can happen more than once:

I never drink and drive.
Mary is never at home when I call.
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Thank you, fivejedjon, for your continuing support. Emotion: smile
The following is the headline from Health section of Time on Sept. 30, 2014
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It's not present tense. It's the bare infinitive following the modal 'may'.

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