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This
week, we’re going to talk about some common problems with adverbs.
Basically, adverbs are words that describe verbs, adjectives, and other
adverbs. For example, "I ran quickly to the store." The adverb quickly
describes the verb run.
What is an adverb?
If a word is not easy to classify as a noun, verb, or adjective, it is
probably an adverb. Some of the most common words in English are adverbs,
including up, so, just, then, how, now, also, here, and more.
Adverbs usually describe verbs. They express when, how, where, and why
an action is done. Many adverbs are easy to find because they have the –ly
ending, such as quickly, surely, and certainly. However, many adverbs do
not have the –ly ending.
Adverbs can also describe adjectives. For example, "It is really cold
today." In this example, really is an adverb that describes the
adjective cold.
Adverbs can describe other adverbs. For example, "I will probably never
go back." Here, the adverb probably describes the adverb never.
Where do you put the adverb?
Where do adverbs go in a sentence? Well, it depends.
Some adverbs can go almost anywhere in a sentence. Let us look at the
adverb sometimes. It can go at the beginning of the sentence as in, "Sometimes,
I walk to work." It can go after the subject: "I sometimes walk to work."
Or it can go at the end of the sentence: "I walk to work sometimes."
Other adverbs can only go in the middle of a sentence. The adverb
probably is an example. "She will probably leave early."
It is incorrect to say, "Probably she will leave early" or "She will
leave early probably." Other such adverbs are never, rarely, seldom, and
always. These are called mid-sentence adverbs. They usually go between
the subject and the main verb. Different types of adverbs have different
sentence positions.
What's the difference between adverbs and adjectives?
Adjectives describe nouns, while adverbs describe verbs, adjectives, and
other adverbs. Take the sentence, "She is careful." The adjective
careful is describing the noun she. But if you said, "She walks
carefully," the adverb carefully is describing the verb walk.
Do you think this is hard? Hardly!
Native speakers sometimes confuse adverbs and adjectives.
The words hard and hardly are especially difficult. Hard is both an
adjective and an adverb. You can say "The bed was hard," using the
adjective, which means it is "very firm." You can also say, "I worked
hard," using the adverb, which means "with a lot of effort."
Hardly is an adverb. A long time ago, it meant "in a hard manner," but
its meaning has changed. People used to say "not hardly.” Over time, the
word “not” disappeared. Since the 1500s, hardly has meant "almost not"
or "barely." For example, "I hardly had time to finish the project."
This conflicting meaning of hard and hardly has become the basis for
jokes.
Listen to cartoon character Homer Simpson playing with the confusion
between hard and hardly. In the scene, Homer’s co-workers are replaced
with robots.
"So you guys are my new co-workers. So working hard or hardly working? (laugh).
I said, ‘Working hard or hardly working?’ ‘Working hard or hardly
working? WORKING HARD OR HARDLY WORKING?’ IT’S A SIMPLE QUESTION!"
Homer is asking the robots if they are working hard (working with energy)
or hardly working (only working a little). The robots, with their exact
reasoning, do not understand the word play in the question.
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