Adverbs
Carol drives carefully. (How does she drive?)
I looked for her everywhere. (Where did you look for her?)
She came to London yesterday. (When did she come to London?)
Adverbs are generally divided into seven groups:
1) Manner: slowly, bravely, carefully, simply, quietly...
2) Place: there, here, up, down, near...
3) Time: yesterday, tomorrow, now, yet, still...
4) Frequency: never, always, often, once, twice...
5) Sentence: actually, really, obviously, evidently...
6) Degree: very, quite, rather, fairly, hardly...
7) Focus: just, only, simply, even, also...
I looked for her everywhere. (Where did you look for her?)
She came to London yesterday. (When did she come to London?)
Adverbs are generally divided into seven groups:
1) Manner: slowly, bravely, carefully, simply, quietly...
2) Place: there, here, up, down, near...
3) Time: yesterday, tomorrow, now, yet, still...
4) Frequency: never, always, often, once, twice...
5) Sentence: actually, really, obviously, evidently...
6) Degree: very, quite, rather, fairly, hardly...
7) Focus: just, only, simply, even, also...
Forming Adverbs
They are generally made from adjectives.
Many adverbs of manner and degree are formed by putting -ly at the end of an adjectives.
slow - slowly
|
happy - happily
|
cold - coldly
|
rapid - rapidly
|
bad - badly
|
kind - kindly
|
I don’t know why, but they spoke to me coldly.
The weather was awfully cold.
You should treat people gently.
Please, drive the car slowly.
When an adjective ends in consonant + y, it becomes -ily.
busy - busily
happy - happily
easy - easily
heavy - heavily
She is working busily.
Chuck passed the test easily.
When an adjective ends in -le, we omit -e and add -(l)y
noble - nobly
possible - possibly
simple - simply
gentle - gently
Ex: My mom brushes my hair gently every day.
When an adjectives ends in -e, we keep -e and add -ly.
extreme - extremely
free - freely
brave - bravely
safe - safely
His political ideas are extremely dull.
Our army fought bravely.
When an adjective ends in -ic, we add -ally.
Systematic - systematically
Phonetic - phonetically
We searched the attic systematically.
Mrs. Burns wanted us to write the words phonetically.
Degrees of Adverbs
- Positive
: Expresses
a quality without a comparison.
Ivan walks slowly.
- Comparative
: Expresses
a higher or lower degree than the positive.
Ida walks faster than Ivan.
- Superlative
: Expresses
the highest or the lowest degree when comparing more than two
things/persons.
Brad walks the slowest.
1. Adverbs having the same form as adjectives:
POSITIVE
|
COMPARATIVE
|
SUPERLATIVE
|
fast
|
faster
|
the fastest
|
early
|
earlier
|
the earliest
|
late
|
later
|
the latest
|
hard
|
harder
|
the hardest
|
They came earlier than me. Kenyans always win prizes in marathons because they run the fastest of all. My parents’ plane will arrive later than my uncle's. |
COMPARATIVE
|
SUPERLATIVE
|
easily
|
more easily
|
most easily
|
quickly
|
more quickly
|
most quickly
|
fluently
|
more fluently
|
most fluently
|
carefully
|
more carefully
|
most carefully
|
Linda drives more carefully than her husband.
Elizabeth speaks English the most fluently.
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