AdverbEmployers also say that foreign-born workers tend to work harder, be more reliable, and complain less than the natives they can hire at the same wage. This is not surprising. Unskilled immigrants have seldom finished secondary school, but they have overcome all kinds of obstacles both to get here and to stay here.—Christopher Jencks, New York Review of Books, 27 Sept. 2007"The pervasive theme is rebellion." Laurel Thatcher Ulrich begins her new book, "Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History," struggling to explain—understand—the appeal of an aside she made in the spring 1976 issue of an academic journal, a comment that has become a popular slogan printed on T-shirts and coffee mugs and bumper stickers, usually without her permission and often without attribution.—Kathryn Harrison, New York Times Book Review, 30 Sept. 2007Kangaroo rats belong to a North American family of rodents well known for living in arid habitats, where they forage almost exclusively for seeds. They seldom have access to drinking water, but instead get most of their moisture from digesting the seeds.—Michael A. Mares, Natural History, November 2003
We seldom go to the movies.
This type of turtle seldom grows over four inches in length.
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Adverb
Trying to rototill around the shrub to loosen the soil is seldom productive and can damage both your rototiller and surrounding plants.—
Mary Marlowe Leverette,
Southern Living,
5 July 2026 Utensils are prohibited and condiments are seldom used, but water and other non-alcoholic drinks are available to speed up digestion.—
Steven Louis Goldstein,
New York Times,
4 July 2026 For the cover of the July 6 & 13, 2026, Body Issue, the cartoonist Edward Steed drew a foot, a body part that seldom gets our full attention.—
Françoise Mouly,
New Yorker,
29 June 2026 In fact, birds tend to fly within the height of the tree canopy that seldom reaches above 100 feet.—
Edward Keegan,
Chicago Tribune,
28 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for seldom
Word History
Etymology
Adverb and Adjective
Middle English, from Old English seldan; akin to Old High German seltan seldom
First Known Use
Adverb
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above