Abu Ahmad ibn Adi al-Jurjani: Most of his hadiths are isolated and strange. Despite his weakness, he is good in narration, but he is closer to weakness than to truthfulness.
Abu al-Faraj ibn al-Jawzi: He weakened him.
Abu Ja'far al-'Uqayli: He weakened him.
Abu Hatim al-Razi: He is lenient in narration, not strong. His hadith is written down.
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: He made many mistakes and was extremely delusional, so he went beyond the limit of being cited as evidence.
Abu Dawud al-Sijistani: He was asked, 'Is he trustworthy?' He said, 'No.'
Abu Zur'a al-Razi: Feeble in hadith, rejected in hadith.
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: His hadith is discarded.
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: Weak
Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub al-Juzajani: Weak
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Weak, he is almost abandoned.
al-Daraqutni: Abandoned in hadith.
al-Dhahabi: He weakened him.
Zayd ibn al-Habbab al-Tamimi: Weak
Abd al-Rahman ibn Mahdi: He does not narrate from him.
Ali ibn al-Madini: I do not narrate anything from him.
Amr ibn Ali al-Fallas: Abandoned in hadith.
Muhammad ibn Isma'il al-Bukhari: Not considered strong by them.
Muhammad ibn Ja'far Ghandar: We dropped his hadith.
Muhammad ibn Abd Allah al-Makhrami: Discard him.
Yahya ibn Ma'in: His hadith is not worth anything. And once: Nothing is written from his hadith.
Ya'qub ibn Sufyan al-Fasawi: Weak