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The phrase "can hardly accommodate" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to express difficulty or limitation in being able to provide or make space for something or someone. Example: The venue for the conference can hardly accommodate all of the attendees. In this sentence, the speaker is saying that the conference venue is not large enough to comfortably or easily fit all of the attendees. Other possible variations of this phrase could include "can barely accommodate," "struggle to accommodate," or "have trouble accommodating."
Exact(3)
The awful act in "The Burgess Boys" is so strange that the book can hardly accommodate it.
Rotten apples No marginal business Smoke alarm Checking the slumpometer Reprints Related items ABB: Barnevik's bountyFeb 28th 2002It adds up to a country whose creaky structure of corporate governance can hardly accommodate its big companies, under pressure to run along more Anglo-Saxon lines.
It is shown that actual Direct Numerical Simulation can hardly accommodate a sufficiently large range of length-scales to perform statistical studies of LES filtered reactive scalar-fields energy budget based on sub-grid scale variances; an estimation of the minimum Reynolds number allowing for such DNS studies is given.
Similar(57)
We can barely accommodate our own students.
The musical overflows with the bounty of his dances, so much so that a sensible story line can hardly be accommodated.
You can hardly say that football abhors a vacuum when it cheerfully accommodates so many of them every Saturday night – even if it's true about Lawro and Match of the Day.
I can hardly wait.
You can hardly see.
He can hardly see.
It can hardly complain.
He can hardly sleep.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com