Abu Bakr al-Bayhaqi: Abandoned
Abu Hatim al-Razi: Weak in Hadith, as if abandoned
Abu Hatim ibn Habban al-Busti: He was a righteous sheikh, very forgetful. The craft of Hadith was not his concern. He would narrate and make mistakes, and he would narrate things he did not know. So there appeared in his Hadith contradictions that he narrates from the trustworthy. It is not permissible to use him as evidence, nor to narrate from him except by way of astonishment
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: People abandoned his Hadith, and once: He mentioned a Munkar Hadith from him
Ahmad ibn Shu'aib al-Nasa'i: Abandoned in Hadith
Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub al-Jawzajani: People were silent about his Hadith
Al-Husayn ibn Idris al-Ansari: Abandoned
Al-Daraqutni: Abandoned
Zakaria ibn Yahya al-Saji: Abandoned, narrates fabrications
Ali ibn al-Ja'd al-Jawhari: Weak
Ali ibn al-Madini: He is not a liar, and I did not narrate anything from him
Amr ibn Ali al-Fallas: Abandoned in Hadith
Muhammad ibn Ismail al-Bukhari: Abandoned in Hadith
Muhammad ibn Sa'd, the scribe of al-Waqidi: Weak, not to be used as evidence
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj al-Nishapuri: Abandoned in Hadith
Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Qattan: He is nothing
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Nothing, and in a narration by Ibn Mahriz, he said: He was forgetful and weak