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Example sentences for "hardly necessary"

  • It is hardly necessary to remark that many a child in his first few Confessions experiences difficulty in finding matter to confess.

  • It is hardly necessary to point out that the unlawful games alluded to have no relation to our English athletic exercises.

  • In such rare cases, it is hardly necessary to add there must be no note of triumph or of self-congratulation.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that this work--or play, if you like that word better--was undertaken with genuine enthusiasm.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that a superior varnish must be clear, transparent, and brilliant.

  • A drawing is shown to illustrate these three kinds of corner joints, and it is hardly necessary to say that no one of them is open to the same objection that attaches to the mitre joint.

  • A great deal of very hard swearing went towards this ingenious defence, for the crew, it is hardly necessary to say, were almost all English.

  • Peter Morris, a Welshman, and it is hardly necessary to say that there was no such person.

  • And it is hardly necessary to say that it was the truth that he was not editor of Blackwood.

  • As to his health, it is hardly necessary for us to insist upon the disorder that such habits must necessarily produce.

  • It is hardly necessary to add that while the size of the pile of straw was great that of the wood was hardly one-tenth of the volume.

  • It is hardly necessary for us to restate here that there must be no harmful influence in all this, no abuse of power.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that the Governor denied having given any such assurance.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that the Colonel was the soul of generosity.

  • It is hardly necessary to add that at last accounts the consent of Mrs. Thatcher had not been obtained.

  • That he did nothing of the kind, but practised economy in all his expenses, it is hardly necessary to state.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that this hostility was, in the main, from her own sex.

  • All these facts, it is hardly necessary to add, serve as further illustrations to the chapter How Sentiments Change and Grow.

  • Perhaps it is hardly necessary to say that Philip always found that his conduct under those conditions would be totally different.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that Arthur was positive and sincere in his praise of the young woman.

  • There is no shadow of a hint anywhere that Cromwell suffered a single qualm in working out the destruction of either More or Fisher, but it is hardly necessary to make him responsible for the equally ruthless attitude of the king.

  • Palpably guilty of so heinous a crime, the presumption in favour of the truth of any minor charges against him is so strong that it is hardly necessary to examine them: they may almost be taken for granted.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that the methods were never qualified by any touch of magnanimity--that the interests of England solely were considered, those of Scotland disregarded.

  • It is hardly necessary to state that the giving the name of Galilee to this church was a mere legendary blunder, originating in the desire to crowd several holy places in one spot.

  • It is hardly necessary to say that architriclinus is the Latin word which, in the Vulgate, translates what the English text terms "the ruler of the feast.

  • It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that sabbatum, or dies sabbati, is the Latin for Saturday.

  • It is hardly necessary to state that this was the celebrated sultan of Damascus, Aleppo, and Egypt, so well known in the history of the crusades.

  • It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to insist upon rivets being, apart from mere considerations of strength, sufficiently near together to insure close work and exclude moisture.

  • It is hardly necessary to add that a large number of the rivets were loose, one of which is shown in Fig.

  • It is hardly necessary to say anything about the use of alcohol to intelligent college men.

  • It is hardly necessary to add in this connection that care should be taken that during the sweating or immediately following it, the body should not be exposed to catch more cold.

  • It is hardly necessary to urge the importance of resisting these onslaughts of sexual passion in their very incipiency.

  • Illustration] The design is well-known to all our readers and as it has already been extensively dissected in the above quotations, further comment is hardly necessary.

  • It is hardly necessary to quote this Act in full though the following extracts are of interest:-- CAP.

  • This paper presents, even when looking at the face of the specimens, so entirely different an appearance to that employed in any of the other series, that a reference to the back is hardly necessary.

  • But it is hardly necessary to remark that, in the mind of the adult, under ordinary circumstances, no perfectly new sensation ever occurs.

  • It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that the deeply organized tendency to mistake the direction of the visible or audible object in these cases has from remote ages been made use of as a means of popular delusion.

  • In a finished painting of any size this preparation is hardly necessary.

  • It is hardly necessary, perhaps, to give many illustrations of the effect of such organic sensations on our dreams.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hardly necessary" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    common ground; conspicuous part; eighteen shillings; free herself; hardly able; hardly conscious; hardly ever; hardly fair; hardly knew; hardly knowing; hardly less; hardly more; hardly necessary; hardly need; her bosom; large profit; literary pursuits; many days; offer sacrifice; original genius; other grain; powerful effect; relieve the; rolling plains; under heavy; who knows