English Grammar: adverbials
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Совдагарова Маргарита Рубеновна

All that we have to know about an adverb.

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Adverbials.

Why do we use adverbials?

We use adverbs to give more information about the verb.

We use adverbials of manner to say how something happens or how something is done:

The children were playing happily.
He was driving
as fast as possible.

We use adverbials of place to say where something happens:

I saw him there.
We met in
London.

We use adverbials of time to say when or how often something happens:

They start work at six thirty.
They
usually go to work by bus.

We use adverbials of probability to show how certain we are about something.

  1. Perhaps the weather will be fine.
  2. He is certainly coming to the party.

How we make adverbials

An adverbial can be an adverb:

He spoke angrily.
They live
here.
We will be back
soon.

or an adverb with an intensifier:

He spoke really angrily.
They live
just here.
We will go
quite soon.
We will go
as soon as possible.

or a phrase with a preposition:

He spoke in an angry voice.
They live
in London.
We will go
in a few minutes.

Where they go in a sentence

Where do adverbials go in a sentence?

We normally put adverbials after the verb:

He spoke angrily.
They live
just here.
We will go
in a few minutes.

or after the object or complement:

He opened the door quietly.
She left
the money on the table.
We saw
our friends last night.
You are looking
tired tonight.

But adverbials of frequency (how often) usually come in front of the main verb:

We usually spent our holidays with our grandparents.
I have
never seen William at work.

But if we want to emphasise an adverbial we can put it at the beginning of a clause:

Last night we saw our friends.
In a few minutes we will go.
Very quietly he opened the door.

If we want to emphasise an adverb of manner we can put it in front of the main verb:

He quietly opened the door.
She had
carefully put the glass on the shelf.

Adverbs of manner        

Adverbs of manner are usually formed from adjectives by adding –ly:

bad > badly; quiet > quietly; recent > recently; sudden > suddenly

but there are sometimes changes in spelling:

easy > easily; gentle > gently

If an adjective ends in –ly we use the phrase in a …. way to express manner:

Silly > He behaved in a silly way.
Friendly > She spoke
in a friendly way.

A few adverbs of manner have the same form as the adjective:

They all worked hard.
She usually arrives
late.
I hate driving
fast.

Note: hardly and lately have different meanings:
He could
hardly walk = It was difficult for him to walk.
I haven’t seen John
lately = I haven’t seen John recently.

We often use phrases with like as adverbials of manner:

She slept like a baby.
He ran
like a rabbit.

 

Adverbs of manner and link verbs

We very often use adverbials with like after link verbs:

Her hands felt like ice.
It smells
like fresh bread.

But we do not use other adverbials of manner after link verbs. We use adjectives instead:

They looked happily happy.
That bread smells
deliciously delicious.

Adverbials of place

We use adverbials of place to describe:

Location

We use prepositions to talk about where someone or something is.

 Examples:

  1. He was standing by the table.
  2. You’ll find it in the cupboard.
  3. Sign your name here – at the bottom of the page.

Direction

We use adverbials to to talk about the direction where someone or something is moving.

Examples:

  1. Walk past the bank and keep going to the end of the street.
  2. The car door is very small so it’s difficult to get into.

Distance

We use adverbials to show how far things are:

Examples:

  1. Birmingham is 250 kilometres from London.
  2. We were in London. Birmingham was 250 kilometres away.

Adverbials of location

Location

We use prepositions to talk about where someone or something is:

above

among

at

behind

below

beneath

beside

between

by

in

in between

inside

near

next to

on

opposite

outside

over

round

through

under

underneath

 

 


He was standing
by the table.
She lives in a village
near Glasgow.
You’ll find it
in the cupboard.

 

We use phrases with of as prepositions:

at the back of

at the top of

at the bottom of

at the end of

on top of

at the front of

in front of

in the middle of


There were some flowers
in the middle of the table.
Sign your name here –
at the bottom of the page.
I can’t see. You’re standing
in front of me.

We can use right as an intensifier with some of these prepositions:

He was standing right next to the table.
There were some flowers
right in the middle of the table.
There’s a wood
right behind our house.

Adverbials of direction

Direction

We also use prepositional phrases to talk about direction:

across

along

back

 back to

down

into

onto

out of

 past

through

to

towards

She ran out of the house.
Walk
past the bank and keep going to the end of the street.

We also use adverbs and adverb phrases for place and direction:

abroad

away

anywhere

downstairs

downwards

everywhere

here

indoors

inside

nowhere

outdoors

outside

somewhere

there

upstairs

I would love to see Paris. I’ve never been there.
The bedroom is
upstairs.
It was so cold that we stayed
indoors.

We often have a preposition at the end of a clause:

This is the room we have our meals in.
The car door is very small so it’s difficult to get
into.
I lifted the carpet and looked
underneath.

Adverbials of distance

Distance

We use adverbials to show how far things are:

Birmingham is 250 kilometres from London.
Birmingham is 250 kilometres
away from London.
It is 250 kilometres
from Birmingham to London.

Sometimes we use a preposition at the end of a clause:

We were in London. Birmingham was 250 kilometres away.
Birmingham was 250 kilometres
off.

Adverbials of time

Adverbials of time

We use adverbials of time to say:

when something happened:

I saw Mary yesterday.
She was born
in 1978.
I will see you
later.
There was a storm
during the night.

• for how long :

We waited all day.
They have lived here
since 2004.
We will be on holiday
from July 1st until August 3rd.

how often (frequency):

They usually watched television in the evening.
We
sometimes went to work by car.

We often use a noun phrase as a time adverbial:

yesterday

last week/month/year

one day/week/month

last Saturday

tomorrow

next week/month/year

the day after tomorrow

next Friday

today

this week/month/year

the day before yesterday

the other day/week/month

Time and dates

We use phrases with prepositions as time adverbials:

• We use at with:

clock times: at seven o’clock - at nine thirty - at fifteen hundred hours
mealtimes: at breakfast - at lunchtime - at teatime

… and in these phrases:

at night - at the weekend - at Christmas - at Easter

• We use in with:

seasons of the year: in spring/summer/autumn/winter - in the spring /summer/autumn/winter
years and centuries: in 2009 -in 1998 - in the twentieth century
months: in January/February/March etc.
parts of the day: in the morning - in the afternoon - in the evening.

• We use on with:

days: on Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday etc - on Christmas day - on my birthday.
dates: on the thirty first of July - on June 15th

Note: We say at night when we are talking about all of the night:

When there is no moon it is very dark at night.
He sleeps during the day and works
at night.

but we say in the night when we are talking about a short time during the night:

He woke up twice in the night.
I heard a funny noise
in the night.

We use the adverb ago with the past simple to say how long before the time of speaking something happened:

I saw Jim about three weeks ago.
We arrived
a few minutes ago.

We can put time phrases together:

We will meet next week at six o’clock on Monday.
I heard a funny noise
at about eleven o’clock last night.
It happened
last week at seven o’clock on Monday night.

How long

We use for to say how long:

We have been waiting for twenty minutes.
They lived in Manchester
for fifteen years.

We use since with the present perfect or the past perfect to say when something started:

I have worked here since December.
They had been watching
since seven o’clock in the morning.

We use from …to/until to say when something starts and finishes:

They stayed with us from Monday to Friday.
We will be on holiday
from the sixteenth until the twentieth.

How often

The commonest adverbials of frequency are:

always

never

normally

occasionally

often

rarely

seldom

sometimes

usually

 

We usually put adverbials of frequency in front of the main verb:

We often spend Christmas with friends.
I have
never enjoyed myself so much.

but they usually come after the verb be:

He was always tired in the evening.
We
are never late for work.

We use the adverbial a lot to mean often or frequently. It comes at the end of the clause:

We go to the cinema a lot.

but before another time adverbial:

We go to the cinema a lot at the weekend.

We use much with a negative to mean not often:

 We don’t go out much. (= We don’t go out often)

We use how often or ever to ask questions about frequency. How often comes at the beginning of the clause:

How often do you go to the cinema?
How often have you been here?

ever comes before the main verb:

Do you ever go to the cinema at the weekend?
Have you
ever been there?

Longer frequency phrases, like every year or three times a day usually come at the end of the clause:

I have an English lesson twice a week.
She goes to see her mother
every day.

Already, still, yet and no longer

We use still to show that something continues up to a time in the past present or future. It goes in front of the main verb:

The children still enjoyed playing games.
They are
still living next door.
We will
still be on holiday.

… or after the present simple or the past simple of be:

Her grandfather is still alive.
They
were still unhappy.

We use already to show that something has happened sooner than it was expected to happen. Like still, it comes before the main verb:

The car is OK. I’ve already fixed it.
It was early but they were
already sleeping.

… or after the present simple or past simple of the verb be:

It was early but we were already tired.
We
are already late.

We use yet in a negative or interrogative clause, usually with perfective aspect (especially in British English), to show that something has not happened by a particular time. yet comes at the end of the sentence:

It was late, but they hadn’t arrived yet.
Have you fixed the car
yet?
She won’t have sent the email
yet.

Adverbials of probability

Adverbials of probability

We use adverbials of probability to show how certain we are about something. The most frequent adverbials of probability are:

certainly - definitely - maybe - possibly
clearly - obviously - perhaps - probably

maybe and perhaps usually come at the beginning of the clause:

Perhaps the weather will be fine.
Maybe it won’t rain.

Other adverbs of possibility usually come in front of the main verb:

He is certainly coming to the party.
Will they
definitely be there?
We will
possibly come to England next year.

but in after am, is, are, was, were:

They are definitely at home.
She
was obviously very surprised.

Comparative adverbs

We can use comparative adverbs to show change or to make comparisons:

I forget things more often nowadays.
She began to speak
more quickly.
They are working
harder now.

We often use than with comparative adverbs

I forget things more often than I used to.
Girls usually work harder
than boys.

Intensifiers:

We use these words and phrases as intensifiers with these patterns:

much - far - a lot - quite a lot - a great deal - a good deal - a good bit - a fair bit

I forget things much more often nowadays.

Mitigators:

We use these words and phrases as mitigators:

a bit - just a bit - a little - a little bit - just a little bit - slightly

She began to speak a bit more quickly

Superlative adverbs

We can use superlative adverbs to make comparisons:

His ankles hurt badly, but his knees hurt worst.
It rains
most often at the beginning of the year.

Intensifiers:

When we intensify a superlative adverb we often use the in front of the adverb, and we use these words and phrases as intensifiers:

easily - much - far - by far


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Совдагарова Маргарита Рубеновна

Сжатый, информативный курс о наречии (примеры,таблицы).