KINDS
OF ADVERBS
ADVERBS
OF MANNER
Adverbs of manner
tell us how something happens. They
are usually placed after the main verb or after the object.
Examples:
- He swims well,
(after the main verb)
- He ran...
rapidly,
slowly,
quickly..
- She spoke...
softly, loudly, aggressively..
- James coughed
loudly
to attract her attention.
- He plays the
flute beautifully.
(after the object)
- He ate the
chocolate cake greedily.
BE
CAREFUL! The adverb should not be put between
the verb and the object:
- He ate greedily
the chocolate cake [incorrect]
- He ate the chocolate
cake greedily [correct]
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.
Example:
- The child ran
happily towards
his mother.
- The child ran
towards his mother happily.
Sometimes an adverb
of manner is placed before a verb + object to add emphasis:
- He gently
woke the sleeping woman.
Some writers put
an adverb of manner at the beginning of the sentence to catch our attention
and make us curious:
- Slowly
she
picked up the knife.
(We want to know
what happened slowly, who did
it slowly, why they did it slowly)
However, adverbs
should always come AFTER intransitive verbs (=verbs which have
no object).
Example:
- The town grew
quickly
- He waited patiently
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:
- She quickly
agreed to re-type the letter (= her agreement was quick)
- She agreed
to re-type the letter quickly
(= the re-typing was quick)
- He quietly
asked me to leave the house (= his request was quiet)
- He asked me
to leave the house quietly
(= the leaving was quiet)