Celia
hardly...when / no sooner...than Have these both structures the same meanings? Do you native speakers use both in the same context or is each one use for a specific moment? What I mean is... does it matter when to use one and another? Thank you!
May 30, 2015 6:44 PM
Answers · 2
I think "no sooner... than" implies a more immediate occurrence than "hardly... when", but other than that, there is no big difference and they're pretty interchangeable. E.g. "No sooner had I started eating than the doorbell rang." makes me think they had sat down, and perhaps lifted their fork to take a bite, when the doorbell rang. "I had hardly started eating when the doorbell rang." makes me think they had sat down and eaten a little, though not much, when the doorbell rang.
May 30, 2015
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