MULTIMEDIA-ENGLISH
7-E) Adverbs (Oxford Online English)
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17:03
Video page URL
https://multimedia-english.com/videos/course/7-e-adverbs-oxford-online-english-5653
Description

In this lesson you will learn about adverbs in English. Watch the presentation video, then read the Explanations and then watch the other related videos in this lesson. In other lessons we see every kind of adverb in more detail, this is just a general introduction.

Explanations

ADVERBS

Adverbs are the words that modify the meaning of a verb and answer the questions: how?, how often?, when?, where?
(They can also modify an adjective or another adverb, but that's not important now)

- he speaks fast --> how? fast
- I sleep well --> how? well
- She is here today --> when? today
- They are dancing happily --> how? happily
- I never drink alcohol --> how often? never
- I live here --> where? here




ADVERBS OF MANNER


Most of the adverbs answer the question HOW? and are called "adverbs of manner". They are usually formed adding -ly to an adjective:
- happy + -ly = happily
- He is a happy man
- He dances happily --> how does he dance? happily
- A slow train moves slowly
More adverbs of manner: calmly, beautifully, badly, nicely, strongly, sadly, softly, ridiculously, madly, etc.
But some adverbs of manner don't end in -ly:
- A fast train moves fast




ADVERBS OF FREQUENCY


Adverbs answering the question HOW OFTEN? are called "adverbs of frequency" (always, never, sometimes, usually, rarely, etc.). Adverbs answering the question WHEN? are called "adverbs of time" (today, tomorrow, now, later, soon, etc.).




ADVERBS OF PLACE


Adverbs answering the question WHERE? are called "adverbs of place" (here, there, over there, nearby, far away, etc.).
- There is a bird over there
- I live here




ADVERBS OF TIME


Adverbs answering the question WHEN? are called "adverbs of time" (tomorrow, today, yesterday, later, soon, early, etc.)


- I will phone you tomorrow
- We can have a drink now or later




POSITION IN THE SENTENCE


They can go before or after the verb:
- She walked across the living-room
- She quietly walked across the living-room
- She walked quietly across the living-room
- She walked across the living-room quietly


Different adverbs may use different positions, some can use all, some can use only one or two.