Adverbs of degree tell us about the intensity or degree of an action, an adjective or another adverb.
Common adverbs of degree:
Almost, nearly, quite, just, too, enough, hardly, scarcely, completely, very, extremely.
Adverbs of degree are usually placed:
Enough, very, too
Enough as an adverb meaning 'to the necessary degree' goes after adjectives and adverbs.
It also goes before nouns, and means 'as much as is necessary'. In this case it is not an adverb, but a 'determiner'.
Too as an adverb meaning 'more than is necessary or useful' goes before adjectives and adverbs, e.g.
Enough and too with adjectives can be followed by 'for someone/something'.
We can also use 'to + infinitive' after enough and too with adjectives/adverb.
Very goes before an adverb or adjective to make it stronger.
If we want to make a negative form of an adjective or adverb, we can use a word of opposite meaning, or not very.
BE CAREFUL! There is a big difference between too and very.
Other adverbs like very
These common adverbs are used like very and not very, and are listed in order of strength, from positive to negative:
extremely, especially, particularly, pretty, rather, quite, fairly, rather, not especially, not particularly.
Note: rather can be positive or negative, depending on the adjective or adverb that follows:
Positive: The teacher was rather nice.
Negative: The film was rather disappointing.
Normally the subject goes before the verb:
SUBJECT | VERB |
I | left |
Negative inversion is used in writing, not in speaking.
Other adverbs and adverbial expressions that can be used like this:
seldom, scarcely, hardly, not only .....
but also, no sooner .....than, not until, under no circumstances.
Adverbs of place tell us where something happens.
They are usually placed after the main verb or after the object:
after the main verb:
after the object:
'Here' and 'there'
With verbs of movement, here means towards or with the speaker:
There means away from, or not with the speaker:
Here and there are combined with prepositions to make many common adverbial phrases:
down here, down there;over here, over there;under here, under there;up here, up there
Here and there are placed at the beginning of the sentence in exclamations or when emphasis is needed.
They are followed by the verb if the subject is a noun:
Or by a pronoun if this is the subject (it, she, he etc.):
NOTE: most common adverbs of place also function as prepositions.
about, across, along, around, behind, by, down, in, off, on, over, round, through, under, up.
Go to Prepositions or Phrasal Verbs
Other adverbs of place: ending in '-wards', expressing movement in a particular direction:
backwards forwards downwards upwards inwards outwards | northwards southwards eastwards westwards homewards onwards |
BE CAREFUL! 'Towards' is a preposition, not an adverb, so it is always followed by a noun or a pronoun:
expressing both movement and location:
ahead, abroad, overseas, uphill, downhill, sideways, indoors, outdoors
Adverbs of manner tell us how something happens. They are usually placed after the main verb or after the object.
The adverb should not be put between the verb and the object:
If there is a preposition before the object, e.g. at, towards, we can place the adverb either before the preposition or after the object.
Sometimes an adverb of manner is placed before a verb + object to add emphasis:
Some writers put an adverb of manner at the beginning of the sentence to catch our attention and make us curious:
However, adverbs should always come AFTER intransitive verbs (=verbs which have no object).
Also, these common adverbs are almost always placed AFTER the verb:
The position of the adverb is important when there is more than one verb in a sentence. If the adverb is placed after a clause, then it modifies the whole action described by the clause.
Notice the difference in meaning between the following pairs of sentences:
Adverbs modify, or tell us more about other words, usually verbs:
Sometimes they tell us more about adjectives:
They can also modify other adverbs:
1. In most cases, an adverb is formed by adding '-ly' to an adjective:
Adjective | Adverb |
cheap | cheaply |
If the adjective ends in '-y', replace the 'y' with 'i' and add '-ly':
Adjective | Adverb |
easy | easily |
If the adjective ends in -'able', '-ible', or '-le', replace the '-e' with '-y':
Adjective | Adverb |
probable | probably |
If the adjective ends in '-ic', add '-ally':
Adjective | Adverb |
basic | basically |
Note: Exception: public - publicly
2. Some adverbs have the same form as the adjective:
Adjective and Adverb | |
early | late |
Compare:
3. 'Well' and 'good'
'Well' is the adverb that corresponds to the adjective 'good'.