does this sound too weird?
or can i use it?
I think it sounds cute and sexy, as in "scantily clad".
But perhaps you mean "my sparsely printed A4 page" ?
What are you trying to convey by this phrase? That you have a thin resume? This is my guess, but only a guess.
I do know that A4 is a common international size of paper; it's worth noting, however, that "A4" will mean nothing whatsoever to many Americans who haven't lived abroad. (As with most measurements, Americans go their own way; ordinary American paper is called "letter-size" (8.5 in × 11 in = 215.9 mm × 279.4 mm.))

That you have a thin resume?
oh thanks for jumping to conclusions! :o ;)
how about brits, do they use A4? i don't mind if americans don't get me, i write british mathildic as far as i can.
i have only ever seen scantily followed by clad or more rarely by dressed, but the dictionary seems to allow to use it like above.
i am talking about a vocabulary list printed out from the internet by the way.
Edited by: mathilda

Hi Mathilda Yes, Brits use A4 paper and the rest of the range C5 envelopes etc.
Cannot suggest an alternative which fits what you mean, scantily does sound a little peculiar though.
Merry Christmas by the way.

Are you trying to say that there just isn't much text on the page or that the printing is faint, to the point that at some places it's impossible or almost impossible to see. "Scantily printed" implies the latter to me. I wouldn't use it if you mean the former.
Hmmm. Sorry for jumping to the wrong conclusion...but I genuinely couldn't imagine what you mean. And I still can't. Neither "scantily" nor "sparsely" are words that I would ever apply to a piece of paper, so I can't imagine what said paper would look like.
(And the fact is, as you've already pointed out, "scantily" is one of those English words used almost always in collocation: scantily clad, scantily clothed, scantily dressed. It's actually difficult to find examples on the web of the word used in any other context.)