How To Use Rarely In A Sentence

  • The gestation period from first inquiry to first completed shipment is rarely less than a couple of years.
  • Trying to link things cross-departmentally is something that in my experience gets talked about a lot, but in reality rarely happens. The Audacity of Growth at Helpful Technology
  • Specimens are rarely found in one unbroken piece, and the process of reconstituting them is akin to completing a jigsaw puzzle.
  • Grim, sure, but true - not to mention ruthlessly egalitarian, which is why people rarely lob the P-word at those whose answer to life is, "Who knows? Why I love Carolyn Hax
  • Times when the range is not used are increasingly infrequent and rarely coincide with ideal surfing conditions. Times, Sunday Times
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  • Some menswear shops do sell more imaginative clothes - but the assistants have rarely met any customers over the age of 36.
  • In his abstract ballets or interpretations of music, he rarely worried about the mood or emotional content of the music.
  • Politically active conservative Christians rarely use the term dominionism as a self-description; many feel it is a loaded or pejorative term.
  • Luminescence is rarely more than 1% efficient and thus of comparatively low intensity.
  • She was rarely astir later than 7 o'clock.
  • In this agent-dominated world, brands will be quickly disassociated with visual trademarks, since people will rarely see them.
  • Kipling's low opinion of English rugby has rarely seemed more apposite. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fitness instructors rarely explain the theory behind their routines. Times, Sunday Times
  • The synagogue is renowned for its bright white exterior and lion-headed gargoyles, which are unusual because animal forms are rarely used in Jewish art.
  • The love of money and the love of learning rarely meet. 
  • Serious allergic reactions, including anaphylaxis, occur rarely, but timely intervention is crucial.
  • Families expressed an increased desire to save but savings rarely increased. Times, Sunday Times
  • Journalists are rarely admitted to the region.
  • In winter it's a wildlife haven; even in the harshest weather it affords a rarely failing food source.
  • The public rarely gets a glimpse into this world. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apart from politically inspired race riots in the early 1960s, rarely did Black people behave badly towards us.
  • It lives subtidally (from the high water mark, which is rarely inundated, to shoreline areas that are permanently submerged), or occasionally intertidally (the area that is exposed to the air at low tide and underwater at high tide). CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • Such bigeneric cross plants do occur rarely in nature, and have at times also been artificially created in the horticultural field.
  • Rarely, a person with iron-deficiency anemia may experience pica, a craving to eat nonfood items such as paint chips, chalk, or dirt.
  • Rarely did a meow receive high marks for both pleasant and urgent.
  • Most teleost fishes possess a complex set of intrinsic caudal fin muscles that have only rarely been studied experimentally.
  • Healthy hares can easily outrun foxes, but can rarely escape relentless packs of hounds chasing them for up to 90 minutes.
  • A company's first public offering is rarely also its last. Principles of Corporate Finance
  • Every Irishman is a person; and I believe that the most interesting persons are rarely the persons of importance. The Irish Mind
  • The expression pervading the countenance of the one was vulgarity; of the other, that which is rarely found, except in persons of high birth. Jack Sheppard A Romance
  • I know that some academics regard conferences as the one or two times a year that they're fully able to reimmerse themselves in their field and reconnect with their scholarly community--and that's probably true, to some degree, for all of us, whether we're at research institutions that support colloquia and reading groups in our field or whether we're at teaching institutions with insanely heavy teaching loads and rarely publish. Archive 2007-02-01
  • Today more than a dozen transitional whale fossils have been unearthed - an excellent series for such rarely fossilized animals.
  • They generally run in families and are rarely caused by an underlying physical illness. The Sun
  • The secret of a good momory is attention, and attention to a subject depends upon our interest in it-- We rarely forget that which has made a deep impression on our minds. 
  • Esophageal probes have been used mainly in the operating room, but esophageal temperature is rarely monitored in critical care areas, and placement of the probe varies.
  • * occasionally, on colleagues 'computers running Mac OS X; nowadays, touch wood, we see this rarely but past reports include: boots up and the desktop appears but it will not open anything - all i get is the' beachball 'rotating continually. Discussions: Message List - root
  • It is a northern animal, nocturnal, and rarely seen, but not uncommon; they are frequently found in ploughed grasslands. Rural Hours
  • Jaworski says McNabb diminishes the impact of his inaccuracy by being an elite scrambler and rarely making stupid throws, and that was true even during his struggles.
  • Rarely has so much wailing been to so little effect. Times, Sunday Times
  • Children begin by loving their parents; after a time they judge them; rarely, if ever, do they forgive them. Oscar Wilde 
  • I get this itch after three months, that no amount of medicated talc can take away: My latest theory is related to the fact that I have rarely lived anywhere longer than two years.
  • According to sense-datum theorists, however, we are rarely, if ever, aware of this indirection in ordinary (veridical) exteroception. Pain
  • We triumphed because we succeeded in something we have rarely managed throughout our history. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nonetheless, conclusive evidence about a treatment's effectiveness is rarely found in a single study. Quick Study: Yoga may help ease the debilitating symptoms of fibromyalgia
  • But, more than the excitement, the sheer seclusion and beauty that a quiet alpine ski run can give is something rarely experienced.
  • As noted above, however, conversion in the B 2 B realm is rarely immediate or online.
  • The phenomenon is difficult to measure, St. Pierre and several others said, because the term jury nullification is rarely invoked; defendants with substantial evidence against them are simply acquitted, or juries deadlock. Thestar.com - Home Page
  • The animals do not hunt and rarely consume meat.
  • Socks are a vital part of your walking kit yet they are rarely given the attention that they deserve.
  • Spikelets are small, 1-flowered, binate, one sessile and the other pedicelled, the sessile spikelet is bisexual and the pedicelled is female and rarely bisexual; sessile spikelets are deciduous with the contiguous joint of the rachis and the pedicel. A Handbook of Some South Indian Grasses
  • The king's voice, which rarely rises above normal speaking levels, is harsh and overloud.
  • So rarely do our financial worlds collide that this week's benefit cuts made for some bruising encounters online. Times, Sunday Times
  • Radiographs are usually negative; rarely, they show avulsion of the apophysis at the tibial tuberosity.
  • He rarely comes up with any new material, he simply recycles his old stuff.
  • It rarely saw him, so closely was he enveloped in Danny's man-eating attack. The Mexican
  • Testing ground would be a worry, but it rarely gets bad on the chase course. The Sun
  • Families expressed an increased desire to save but savings rarely increased. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Dalasi is divided into 100 bututs, and there are coins for five, 10, 25 and 50 bututs, although apart form the 50 these are rarely seen.
  • In his letters, as in conversation, he offers himself no sanctuary, and the picture we are left to gather is an exaggeration of the facts: cold, hard, captious, rarely affectionate, often gloomy.
  • Also known as the paragraph mark, the pilcrow, for such a humble, rarely used mark, has a surprisingly complex history.
  • Having children here is what we call a secondary effect of migration; it's something that is so far down the line, the possibility of using a child to legalize your status, that it's rarely given as a reason, when we interview immigrants, for coming to this country. CNN Transcript Mar 31, 2005
  • There are many well-paid and highly respectable careers which do not require a university education, and this is rarely talked about. Times, Sunday Times
  • The instructions as to sterilisation are rarely given in full; the routine method of exposure in the steam steriliser at 100° C. (without pressure) for twenty minutes on each of three successive days for all fluid media, and thirty minutes on each of three successive days for all liquefiable or solid media must be carried out; and only when these general rules are to be departed from are further details given. The Elements of Bacteriological Technique A Laboratory Guide for Medical, Dental, and Technical Students. Second Edition Rewritten and Enlarged.
  • Ah, but voters are fickle and rarely take into consideration the desires of distant princelings (or columnists, for that matter).
  • Such fish is rarely met with in the north country.
  • Some components of the vegan and fruitarian diets are frequent causes of allergies, but allergy caused by pork or chicken meat is rarely if ever encountered.
  • These organisms are small and rarely noticed, much like relative nobody Preston. The Sun
  • Even though children with MEN2B rarely have hyperparathyroidism, they should also be screened annually. Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 2
  • We occasionally though rarely see something of this kind in plants: thus the embryonic leaves of the ulex or furze, and the first leaves of the phyllodineous acaceas, are pinnate or divided like the ordinary leaves of the leguminosae. On the Origin of Species~ Chapter 13 (historical)
  • When you go away on vacation, Scorpio, you rarely a forwarding number.
  • In Germany it is called the ruffle pigeon, in allusion to the feathers on its breast; and it has rarely any feathers on its feet. The Book of Household Management
  • “You rarely hear Palin criticized for being such a bad governor as opposed to other Republican governors.” Matthew Yglesias » Palin and the Jews
  • The model of perfect competition presented above is rarely seen in practice.
  • Because wilful blindness to facts is rarely good policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are capable of defending well and attacking well, but rarely at the same time. Times, Sunday Times
  • Another factor is that he rarely plays well in domes, and the game is in the Superdome.
  • We would do better to say: _more_ is often _better_ , but _most_ is rarely _best_ , especially if we fail to measure everything together, tangible and intangible alike. Who Loses From Efficiency?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Young men's friendships rarely achieve the depth of intimacy of young women's.
  • Rural spinners could not compete with cheap, factory-spun thread, and country weavers could rarely survive far from eastern supplies of yarn and the industry's principal markets.
  • Rarely, fulminant ischaemic colitis occurs with gangrene or perforation and needs urgent surgical exploration.
  • Britain's growth rate has rarely exceeded that on the continent by more than one percentage point.
  • It's part of a campaign to highlight a problem that rarely gets the airing it deserves. Times, Sunday Times
  • Only a fortnight ago, England coach Duncan Fletcher lamented that even the world's best all-rounders rarely reached the heights of their batting and bowling games at the same time.
  • Sparrows, starlings, Indian mynahs and feral pigeons rarely visit Australian gardens, which welcome an array of colourful native birds.
  • Apart from that, Motherwell controlled much of the play but apart from Steven Hammell's first-half free-kick they rarely stretched Alan Main.
  • His hair was short and wavy, and oh, so black, a true blue-black, such as Pamela had rarely seen before.
  • pundonor," the high punctilio, and rarely drew the stiletto in their disputes, but their pride was silent and contumelious. Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada
  • And for those who rarely venture South of the river - this beats every bar in West London by miles.
  • Fortunately, actual working scientists rarely bother with such niceties - so they proceed to search for Neptune, quarks and so on.
  • In practice, this situation will arise only very rarely if a regime of symptom control and no more has been adopted.
  • Such preoccupations rarely seem to have troubled the solitary beings who inhabit the clamorous pages of her witty, erudite and anecdotal - if inconclusive - study.
  • Short of being caught red-handed stealing clients' money, accountants were rarely disciplined.
  • The love of money and the love of learning rarely meet. 
  • Be it anti-drugs patrols in the Caribbean, anti-piracy patrols off Somalia, mine clearance in the Persian Gulf or intelligence gathering by nuclear-powered attack submarines, naval operations rarely make the news.
  • It meant working on a smaller budget and going back to hire companies she had rarely visited in recent times. Times, Sunday Times
  • In a war, each soldier generally fought for himself and the phalanx was rarely presented.
  • But one of my biggest disappointments is that I rarely find occasions to share my love of metal with my indie rock friends.
  • The accompanying editorial concluded that dual therapy was rarely indicated.
  • These stories rarely take the form of something blatantly heinous like overt racism.
  • My son's cockatiel eats like a bird, so our stock of millet and black-oil sunflower seeds rarely needs replenishing.
  • Times when the range is not used are increasingly infrequent and rarely coincide with ideal surfing conditions. Times, Sunday Times
  • A clog is rarely in the trap and the chemical only helps open the drain a little bit.
  • Even bilateral treaties impinge upon non-parties: the distribution of values between two parties can rarely be contained within neatly drawn lines.
  • Former "ethnic" goods are rarely differentiated, with grocery stores selling Bok Choy next to spinach, lemon grass alongside parsley, and Indian chutneys in the ketchup and mustard aisle.
  • While rodents often succeed in opening cocoons and extracting the nutritious pupae, birds rarely invest the time and effort needed to pierce the silken armor.
  • Hidden sellers of crack, powder cocaine, and heroin and hidden users of these drugs have rarely been available for behavioral research while pursuing these criminalized activities.
  • Yet it is rarely posed as a major issue of AIDS prevention.
  • Two other endangered birds, the swift parrot (Lathamus discolor) and the regent honeyeater (Xanthomyza phyrigia), were regularly seen in the region 20 to 30 years ago but are now rarely if ever encountered. Naracoorte woodlands
  • The melancholic's experience is very different, partly because the loss being grieved rarely obeys the reality principle.
  • Their warbling spring song is also rarely heard. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was trained by nuns and devoted her life to prayer and austerities, but spoke rarely. Times, Sunday Times
  • As when he plays, rarely a dull moment. Times, Sunday Times
  • She rarely sleeps for eight hours at a stretch .
  • His work rarely rises above the mediocre.
  • This happens to carp and most recently barbel but rarely happens to predators.
  • But perhaps the best example is the Senate's rulebook, which is rarely reformed, and so increasingly misused. A single shot at Senate reform
  • They don't have a button on the waistband but since I rarely wear short tops that's okay.
  • Rarely, an infant can contract the infection during delivery and develop a fever after birth.
  • Its members rarely published any verse or stories for adult market publications, and wrote instead for children's magazines, a blind for some of the most experimental work in the Stalinist era.
  • The rear footwells of my car always contain ample beverages for a week, so I rarely buy drinks out.
  • The interactions between the characters in Springtime obviously form a political allegory, but rarely have I seen allegorical conceits that were as likeable as these characters are.
  • Movie bombshell Megan Fox gave new meaning to the word transformer during a recent day out in L.A., when the sexy star, who is rarely seen without her signature dark eye makeup and slash of red lipstick, dared to go bare while picking up beauty supplies. Megan Fox Without Makeup (PHOTO)
  • This is an area rarely visited by Europeans.
  • She married again and was finally reconciled with her father, but rarely spoke about her prison experiences. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Sabres rarely forechecked aggressively, and Peca's biggest job was usually to shut down the opponent's top center.
  • The eclectic feel suggests a lively mind whose music rarely stands still. The Sun
  • Although people occasionally discussed questions of local autonomy in private, they rarely raised them, even obliquely, in public.
  • Rarely has a debate attracted so much media attention.
  • He's rarely in the gossip columns. Times, Sunday Times
  • This aspect of forensics is rarely mentioned in polite company, but if a skull has a measurably smaller-than-average brain case, it it almost certainly someone of African descent. The Volokh Conspiracy » 1. Science, Faith, and Not Ruling Out Possibilities
  • Rarely has the church appeared so out of touch with present-day Scotland than it did during the cardinal's sermon.
  • One rarely struck up a conversation with Angela unless she spoke first; anyway, it was enough just to be with her.
  • Though it is rarely discussed, few argue that the poor and oppressed have the political capital necessary to compete for the federal funding and social programs that often go to wealthier cities and neighbourhoods.
  • On the other hand, reopening contentious matters or permitting one or more of the parties to add to their case or make a new case should rarely be allowed.
  • Its main business was the safe but dull bills discounting - a sound and a profitable business as traders all over the country rarely ever dishonour their bills.
  • My friend Phil Proctor just sent along a poem that I much enjoyed, ‘Forgetfulness,’ by Billy Collins - and I rarely enjoy unrhymed poems.
  • The media rarely intrude into this haven because they are unwanted, deterred by the astronomical cost of gaining access and bored by the impenetrable language. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bruising, petechiae, epistaxis, bleeding gums, excessive menses, retinal hemorrhages, intestinal bleeding, and rarely cerebral hemorrhage may occur as manifestations of the thrombocytopenia.
  • Both claims are often implied in arguments, but rarely made explicit.
  • WSJ music critic Jim Fusilli introduces you to the 'Gee-Bees', the generationally biased among us who rarely attribute their affection for the music of their youth to fond memories. Music Sales, Show Tickets Rose in 2011
  • Because Hamilton rarely has taken a tough stance and management has sent mixed signals to him about handling some dicey situations, things have gotten borderline out of control.
  • In nearly five decades of concert going this writer has rarely heard more exquisite, sensitively projected Chopin.
  • Important nations are feared, respected, and rarely trifled with.
  • The truth is rarely pure and never simple. Oscar Wilde 
  • Although the frigatebird spends most of its life at sea, it is rarely seen swimming. Trinidade-Martin Vaz Islands tropical forests
  • Only rarely are chuck-will's-widows found during the daytime; most records are for night-singing birds.
  • Teff Teff, Eragrostis tef, is the major crop in Ethiopia, but rarely grown elsewhere. On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
  • The oldest staff maintained discipline often just with the raising of an eyebrow and rarely shouted. Times, Sunday Times
  • He rarely referred to them by name, merely as anonymous lackeys laquais. Champlain's Dream
  • We rarely wake up before 4pm, so we're not too clued-up about breakfast television.
  • In this debate the opposing sides rarely address the other's best arguments.
  • These are plants growing in sea or fresh water, or on damp surfaces, with a filamentous, or more rarely a leaf-like pulverulent or gelatinous thallus; the last two forms essentially microscopic. Scientific American Supplement, No. 384, May 12, 1883
  • We should not be surprised at this: after all, quantitative research teaches us that it is rarely the case that we find perfect associations between variables.
  • They often tried to force the play early and, with unforced errors also creeping in at inopportune times, they rarely completed sets of six.
  • Very rarely do you get a bond or bail if the death penalty is being sought.
  • People rarely succeed unless they have fun in what they are doing. Dale Carnegie 
  • British made films or serials rarely explore social relations and conditions in the Caribbean.
  • Karadzic rarely referred to specific allegations in the indictment, concentrating instead on what he described as the victimization of the Serbs in Bosnia and Croatia, which prompted them to take up arms. Fore, right!
  • There were hailstones, rarely heard loud thunder, lightning, strong gusty winds and sheets of rain.
  • Vakhtang Kodanashvili took a jazzier and more extroverted approach to the Piano Concerto in F, a too rarely heard wonder from 1926. Music review: the Post-Classical Ensemble's 'Russian Gershwin' evening
  • We've rarely seen him in such unheroic mode (at one point he even breaks down and weeps), though he does radiate the intensity of a desperate dad.
  • Those that routinely forage on the continental shelf rarely strand. Times, Sunday Times
  • He rarely gets up before noon.
  • The primary premise of this theory is that although errors can occur within highly reliable organizations, they rarely do so.
  • The meat of one's clan totem was traditionally avoided; even today animals representing totems are rarely eaten.
  • The talented actor, Jeremy Irons, rarely gets an opportunity to express his true histrionic skills in the tumults movie.
  • There will rarely be problems for a legal spouse in a new country - but unmarried partners may both have to apply.
  • His word was his bond, rarely was anyone disappointed.
  • The phrase "yeah yeah yeah" can rarely have been delivered with so much unhinged passion.
  • He rarely turned work down and was not overly discerning about the quality of the productions in which he appeared. Times, Sunday Times
  • Another new duck for us was the exquisite Harlequin Duck, a waterfowl rarely spotted close to shore.
  • And this credo is rarely as true elsewhere as it is in shôjo manga. 30 « October « 2009 « The Manga Curmudgeon
  • The racemes consist of many male spikelets with one (rarely two) female spikelets at the base; the rachis is stout above, and the part within the bract enclosing the female spikelet is slender. A Handbook of Some South Indian Grasses
  • He put rarely - used things into the wicker bag.
  • Because you've an instinctive understanding of others, you rarely judge anybody. Times, Sunday Times
  • Voice, shawms, and dulcians will bring to life the rarely heard music of early Guatemalan manuscripts, found in Bloomington's own famed Lilly Library.
  • Rarely has such a quiet, unassuming display prompted such effusive praise and raucous celebration. Times, Sunday Times
  • But schools are rarely held accountable for a far worse rate of failure.
  • Since it's not funny, and it's rarely interesting, I know this movie bored even the dolts in the audience.
  • As a result, there is rarely the time to provide adequate explanations as to why a particular step is carried out.
  • It is true, however, that relationships between cads and starry-eyed romantics are rarely what they seem.
  • Once the map is naturalised we rarely bother to ask whether what we are looking at is ‘representation’ or ‘the world,’ and cartographers rarely bother to tell us.
  • He would become her knight and devote himself to her service, though his passion for her would rarely be consummated.
  • Geologists often talk about the "flexural" link between tectonic loads and sedimentary basins, but they rarely do the math. VersionTracker: Mac OS X
  • Rarely has there been a more nauseating sight in a Scottish newspaper.
  • Coastal migrants can often be found along tidal creeks, salt marsh edges, and mudflats, rarely on sandy ocean beaches.
  • His familiarity with many rarely used languages surprised us all.
  • Events of this type rarely go according to plan.
  • The direct clinical relevance of such rodent studies may not be immediately apparent, because humans with airway infection rarely become bacteremic or septic when infected with even the wild-type, more virulent organisms.
  • Certainly they rarely showed any sign of looking like champions after a good opening spell, as Kirkcaldy showed a fighting spirit which belied their lowly status.
  • I rarely blowdry my hair too and the hairdresser is always exclaiming (? .... wierd to use this word) that it is so healthy ... Unproductive Monday
  • And I can't count the number of times I've had people recall some they know or themselves being bitted by a German Shepherd Dog, a breed rarely on a BSL list. Pam Spaulding: Thought Provoking Surprises in Breed-Specific Legislation
  • Outsourcing and subcontracting were rarely practised and much work was done locally. Times, Sunday Times
  • Zhanghua Tao said that he rarely look at brokerage research report is basically independent study.
  • In an age where publicists' hype tells us more than we want to know about mediocre writers, Coetzee rarely gives interviews.
  • Settings of the Holy Communion and of canticles are rarely used, however, and the emphasis remains firmly congregational.
  • Giving out criticism rather than praise is a tactic that rarely works in the workplace.
  • From the historical depths of its culture and the dispersion of its bearers, it has acquired a richness and diversity rarely achieved within a single national entity, while keeping many fundamental elements that ensure its unity.
  • Between 1830 and mid-century, colonial licensing laws were repealed, temporary, or rarely enforced.
  • His family said that was uncharacteristic as he rarely drank.

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