Adverbs in English Learn All About English Adverbs

Hi, I’m Stephanie.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn about adverbs.

What do adverbs do?

What’s the difference between adjectives
and adverbs?

How do you use adverbs in English?

You can learn the answers to these questions
in this lesson.

Let’s start with a challenge.

Can you write down five English adverbs?

Pause the video and do it now.

Ready?

I’m guessing you wrote down words ending
with -ly.

For example:

quickly
slowly

Or: clearly

These are all adverbs.

However, there are many other adverbs.

Many of them don’t end with -ly, like these:

fast
too

Or: often

Many adverbs aren’t just one word.

Adverbs can be two words, or even whole phrases.

For example:

last week
in a very strange way

for the last six years

So you might be thinking: what do adverbs
actually do?

What are adverbs?

Adverbs are describing words.

They add information to something else in
your sentence.

Adverbs can describe many different things.

You can use an adverb to describe a verb,
like this:

He speaks very loudly.

Does everyone drive that fast in this city?

I think I sound better than I did the first
time.

The adverbs
add information to the verbs

These adverbs all describe the verbs by saying
how someone did something.

For example, look at the first sentence: he
speaks very loudly.

The adverb loudly tells you how he speaks.

You can also use adverbs to add information
to verbs in other ways.

For example:

I kind of enjoyed it, but it could have been
better.

We talked a little, but we didn’t have time
to discuss everything.

What else?

Well, you can use an adverb to show when,
where, or how often something happens.

For example:

Let’s meet at eight o’clock.

She moved overseas after she graduated.

I don’t often have time to cook for myself.

Remember that adverbs can be phrases; adverbs
aren’t always single words.

Another point: adverbs can add information
to adjectives, or even to other adverbs!

How does this work?

Can you think of any examples of this?

Here are some examples:

It was a really exciting trip.

It’s too hot in here.

She works incredibly hard.

You can see two examples where an adverb describes
an adjective…

…and one example where an adverb describes
another adverb.

Remember that hard here is an adverb, because
it describes a verb, works.

Is that everything?

No, not quite!

Adverbs can do one more thing.

Adverbs can also express your opinion about
a situation.

Look at three sentences:

She’s obviously the best of the candidates
we’ve seen so far.

Apparently, they’re not sure they want to
get married any more.

Fortunately, we were able to recover most
of the files.

These adverbs are different because they don’t
just add information to one word; they add

information to the whole sentence.

So, you can see that adverbs can do many,
many different things.

They can describe verbs, adjectives, other
adverbs, or even whole sentences.

But, there’s a connection.

Do you remember what we said at the start
of this section?

Adverbs describe other things.

They add information to something else in
your sentence.

Now, let’s look at our next question: how
do you form adverbs?

Actually, this question isn’t always relevant.

For most English adverbs, you don’t need
to ‘form’ them.

They just exist!

For example: too, very, sometimes, always,
here and soon are all adverbs, and you don’t

need to do anything to them.

So, why ask the question at all?

For some adverbs, you can form them from adjectives.

This is mostly true for adverbs which describe
verbs: adverbs which describe how someone

does something.

For example, slow is an adjective.

How can you make an adverb from it?

Look at a sentence and complete the missing
word:

He eats very s________.

Do you know the answer?

The answer is slowly.

You add -ly to the adjective to make an adverb.

This is the same for many adverbs which describe
verbs.

For example:

quiet → quietly
nice → nicely

clear → clearly

Can you use these adverbs in a sentence?

Pause the video and write down three sentences
using these adverbs.

Of course, there are many possibilities!

Here are some suggestions:

Everyone was sitting quietly and reading.

He sings very nicely.

You clearly told me that you would be here
at ten thirty.

However, even here, you can’t just think
‘add -ly to an adjective’.

It doesn’t always work!

First, if an adjective ends with -y, you need
to change -y to -ily to make an adverb.

For example:

healthy → healthily
lazy → lazily

happy → happily

Secondly, some words don’t change their
form.

The same word can be either an adjective or
an adverb.

For example:

He’s a really fast worker.

He works really fast.

You’re a better dancer than you used to
be.

You dance better than you used to.

Fast and better can be used as adjectives
or adverbs, and the form of the word doesn’t

change.

Thirdly, some adjectives already end in -ly
like ugly, friendly, likely or oily.

These adjectives can’t be made into adverbs.

Finally, some adverbs are irregular.

Words which don’t change, like fast or better,
are examples of irregular adverbs.

There’s one more important one: what’s
the adverb from the adjective good?

The answer is well.

For example:

She’s a good writer.

She writes well.

Now, you know how to form adverbs from adjectives.

Remember that you don’t need to ‘form’
most adverbs.

Most adverbs are ready for you to use, and
you don’t have to do anything to them!

So, now seems like a good time to ask a new
question: what’s the difference between

adjectives and adverbs?

Hopefully, you have enough information from
parts one and two to answer this question.

Do you know the answer?

Adjectives and adverbs both describe other
words.

Adjectives describe nouns.

For example:

Are you a good cook?

He has a loud voice.

My computer is so slow!

Adverbs describe everything else: verbs, adjectives,
adverbs and whole sentences.

That sounds easy, right?

So, let’s test your skills!

Look at four sentences.

Is the word in red an adjective or an adverb?

It’s unlikely that we’ll be there on time.

I found the exam really hard.

I worked really hard preparing for the exam.

He hardly studied at all, but he got a high
score!

What do you think?

Pause the video if you want more time to think
about it.

Unlikely and hard are adjectives.

Hard and hardly are adverbs.

Did you get the right answers?

There are two things to pay attention to here.

One: the form of the word doesn’t tell you
if it’s an adjective or an adverb.

Unlikely ends in -ly, but it’s not an adverb;
it’s an adjective.

Hard in the third sentence doesn’t end in
-ly, but it’s an adverb which describes

a verb.

Two: the same word can be an adjective or
an adverb in different sentences, like hard,

which is an adjective in the second sentence,
but an adverb in the third sentence.

So, what can you do here?

You can’t depend on memory.

If you think something like, ‘Hard is an
adjective’, that won’t work all the time.

Don’t look at the form of the word; look
at what the word does in the sentence.

Does the word describe a noun?

It’s an adjective.

Does it describe something else: a verb, an
adjective, another adverb, or the whole sentence?

It’s an adverb.

Next, let’s look at one more important question:
how do you use adverbs in a sentence?

More specifically: where should you put the
adverb?

Let’s start with a simple point: word order
rules for adverbs in English are complicated.

There are many rules, and as usual the rules
don’t work all of the time.

So, if you want to use an adverb and you’re
not sure where it should go in the sentence,

trust your instinct first.

If it sounds right, it probably is.

If you want to understand word order rules
in depth, you need to divide adverbs into

five different categories.

You already saw these categories in part one,
although we didn’t give them names.

Let’s review now!

Adverbs of manner describe a verb.

They describe how someone does something.

For example: fast, lazily, or well.

Adverbs of time and place describe where or
when something happens.

For example: yesterday, here, or in five minutes.

Adverbs of frequency describe how often something
happens.

For example: often, sometimes, or never.

Adverbs of degree mostly add information to
other adjectives or adverbs.

For example: very, too, or a little.

Comment adverbs describe a whole sentence
or situation.

For example: unfortunately, basically, or
obviously.

Here you have five different categories of
adverb.

Mostly, where you put the adverb depends on
the type of adverb it is.

So, for example, comment adverbs follow different
rules to adverbs of manner.

‘Mostly’?

Why ‘mostly’?

Of course, there are exceptions!

Remember, trust your instinct when you can.

Now, let’s look at how to use these different
types of adverb in an English sentence.

Adverbs of manner go after the verb or verb
phrase which they describe.

For example:

He drives slowly.

She sings well.

Here, you have very simple examples: a verb
followed by an adverb.

Remember that adverbs of manner can also follow
a verb phrase.

For example:

She didn’t handle the situation well.

Adverbs of time and place usually go at the
end of the sentence or phrase, like this:

Let’s leave in half an hour.

Is there a bank nearby?

If you have both, then adverbs of place go
before adverbs of time:

She was here ten minutes ago.

Adverbs of frequency usually go before the
main verb.

For example:

I usually get up early.

They hardly ever talk to each other.

There’s one important exception here: if
the main verb is be, adverbs of frequency

go after it:

He isn’t often so talkative.

Adverbs of degree go before the word they
describe:

It’s absolutely freezing in here!

She took the news very calmly.

Comment adverbs usually go at the beginning
of the sentence:

Basically, you’ve got two options.

Eventually, we had to admit that things weren’t
going how we expected.

That’s a lot of rules!

It’s good to have an idea of the rules,
or know where to find them in case you want

to look something up.

However, you don’t need to carry all of
these in your head all the time.

Remember that you can (and should) use your
instinct.

Finally, here are two important points which
you can carry in your head and which you should

remember:

One: if the verb has two parts, most adverbs
will go in the middle, before the main verb.

Try it: look at five sentences, and put the
adverb in the right place.

Pause the video, and start again when you
think you have the answers.

Ready?

Let’s look at the answers:

They didn’t even tell us they’d be late.

I’ve just spoken to her.

He’s quickly becoming one of our most valuable
team members.

I can probably do it by next Wednesday.

She hasn’t always been like that.

Did you get them all right?

This is a useful rule, and many of the mistakes
that English learners make with adverb word

order are related to this rule, so remember
it!

We said before that there are two important
points.

What’s the second?

There can be more than one possible position
for an adverb.

For example:

He can be very moody sometimes.

Sometimes, he can be very moody.

Both of these are possible.

The first is more common, but the second is
also correct, and you might use this if you

want to emphasise the word sometimes.

So, if you have two choices, and you aren’t
sure which is right, maybe they both are!

Hopefully this lesson has helped you to understand
English adverbs and how to use them.

Want more practice?

Check out the full version of this lesson
on Oxford Online English dot com.

You can check your understanding of this lesson
with a quiz.

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是斯蒂芬妮。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以了解副词。

副词有什么作用?

形容词
和副词有什么区别?

英语中的副词怎么用?

您可以在本课中了解这些问题的答案

让我们从一个挑战开始。

你能写下五个英语副词吗?

暂停视频并立即执行。

准备好?

我猜你写下了以-ly结尾的单词

例如:

很快
慢慢地

或: 清楚地

这些都是副词。

但是,还有许多其他副词。

它们中的许多不以 -ly 结尾,例如:

fast
too

或:通常

许多副词不只是一个词。

副词可以是两个词,甚至是整个短语。

例如:

上周
以一种非常奇怪的

方式过去六年

所以你可能会想:副词
实际上是做什么的?

什么是副词?

副词是描述词的。

他们将信息添加到
您句子中的其他内容中。

副词可以描述许多不同的事物。

你可以用副词来形容一个动词,
像这样:

他说话的声音很大。

这个城市的每个人都开那么快吗?

我觉得我的声音比第
一次好。

副词
为动词添加信息

这些副词都通过说
某人如何做某事来描述动词。

例如,看第一句话:他
说话声音很大。

副词大声告诉你他是如何说话的。

您还可以使用副词
以其他方式向动词添加信息。

例如:

我有点喜欢它,但它本来可以
更好。

我们谈了一点,但我们没有
时间讨论所有事情。

还有什么?

好吧,您可以使用副词来表示
某事发生的时间、地点或频率。

例如:

我们八点见。

她毕业后移居海外。

我经常没有时间自己做饭。

请记住,副词可以是短语; 副词
并不总是单个词。

还有一点:副词可以
给形容词添加信息,甚至可以给其他副词添加信息!

这是如何运作的?

你能想到这方面的任何例子吗?

以下是一些例子:

这是一次非常令人兴奋的旅行。

这里太热了。

她工作异常努力。

您可以看到两个例子,其中一个副词描述
了一个形容词……

……还有一个例子,一个副词描述了
另一个副词。

请记住,这里的 hard 是一个副词,因为
它描述了一个动词,works。

这是全部吗?

不,不完全是!

副词还可以做一件事。

副词也可以表达你对
某种情况的看法。

看三句话:

她显然是迄今为止我们见过的最好的候选人

显然,他们不确定他们是否想再
结婚。

幸运的是,我们能够恢复
大部分文件。

这些副词是不同的,因为它们不
只是为一个词添加信息; 他们

在整个句子中添加信息。

所以,你可以看到副词可以做很多
很多不同的事情。

它们可以描述动词、形容词、其他
副词,甚至是整个句子。

但是,有联系。

你还记得我们在本节开始时所说的话
吗?

副词描述其他事物。

他们将信息添加到
您句子中的其他内容中。

现在,让我们看看我们的下一个问题:
你如何形成副词?

实际上,这个问题并不总是相关的。

对于大多数英语副词,您
不需要“形成”它们。

他们只是存在!

例如:too、very、sometimes、always、
here和soon都是副词,你

不需要对它们做任何事情。

那么,为什么要问这个问题呢?

对于某些副词,您可以由形容词组成。

对于描述动词的副词来说,这主要是正确的
:描述某人

如何做某事的副词。

例如,慢是形容词。

你怎么能用它做一个副词?

看一个句子并补全缺失的
单词:

他吃得很 s________。

你知道答案吗?

答案是慢慢来。

你在形容词上加-ly来做副词。

许多描述动词的副词也是如此

例如:

安静→安静地
好→非常

清楚→清楚

你能在句子中使用这些副词吗?

暂停视频并
使用这些副词写下三个句子。

当然,有很多可能性!

以下是一些建议:

每个人都安静地坐着阅读。

他唱歌很好听。

你清楚地告诉我你会
在十点三十分到这里。

但是,即使在这里,您也不能只考虑
“将 -ly 添加到形容词”。

它并不总是有效!

首先,如果形容词以-y结尾,则
需要将-y改为-ily来做副词。

例如:

健康→健康
懒惰→懒惰

快乐→快乐

其次,有些词不会改变它们的
形式。

同一个词既可以是形容词也可以
是副词。

例如:

他是一个非常快的工人。

他的工作速度非常快。

你是一个比以前更好的舞者

你跳得比以前好。

Fast and better 可以用作形容词
或副词,词形

不变。

第三,一些形容词已经以-ly结尾,
例如丑陋、友好、可能或油腻。

这些形容词不能做成副词。

最后,有些副词是不规则的。

不变的词,如快速或更好,
是不规则副词的例子。

还有一个更重要的问题:
形容词good的副词是什么?

答案很好。

例如:

她是个好作家。

她写得很好。

现在,您知道如何从形容词组成副词了。

请记住,您不需要“形成”
大多数副词。

大多数副词都已准备好供您使用,
您无需对它们做任何事情!

所以,现在似乎是提出一个新问题的好时机

形容词和副词有什么区别?

希望您从第一
部分和第二部分中获得足够的信息来回答这个问题。

你知道答案吗?

形容词和副词都描述其他
词。

形容词描述名词。

例如:

你是个好厨师吗?

他的声音很大。

我的电脑太慢了!

副词描述一切:动词、形容词、
副词和整个句子。

这听起来很容易,对吧?

那么,让我们来测试一下你的技能吧!

看四句话。

红字是形容词还是副词?

我们不太可能准时到达那里。

我发现考试真的很难。

我非常努力地准备考试。

他几乎没有学习,但他得到了很高的
分数!

你怎么认为?

如果您想有更多时间考虑,请暂停视频

不太可能和困难是形容词。

hard 和 hard 是副词。

你得到正确的答案了吗?

这里有两点需要注意。

一:单词的形式不会告诉
你它是形容词还是副词。

不太可能以-ly结尾,但它不是副词;
这是一个形容词。

第三句的hard不以
-ly结尾,但它是形容动词的副词

二:同一个词
在不同的句子中可以是形容词也可以是副词,比如hard

,第二句是形容词,
第三句是副词。

那么,你可以在这里做什么?

你不能依赖记忆。

如果您认为“硬是
形容词”之类的东西,那将不会一直有效。

不要看单词的形式;
看看这个词在句子中的作用。

这个词是否描述了一个名词?

这是一个形容词。

它是否描述了其他东西:动词、
形容词、另一个副词或整个句子?

这是一个副词。

接下来,让我们看一个更重要的问题:
如何在句子中使用副词?

更具体地说:你应该把副词放在哪里

让我们从一个简单的点开始:
英语副词的词序规则很复杂。

有很多规则,而且像往常一样,这些规则
并不总是有效。

因此,如果您想使用副词,
但不确定它应该在句子中的哪个位置,

请首先相信您的直觉。

如果它听起来正确,它可能是。

如果你想深入了解词序规则
,你需要将副词分为

五个不同的类别。

你已经在第一部分看到了这些类别,
尽管我们没有给它们命名。

现在就来回顾一下吧!

方式副词描述动词。

它们描述了某人如何做某事。

例如:fast、lazily 或 well。

时间和地点副词描述
某事发生的地点或时间。

例如:昨天、这里或五分钟后。

频率副词描述某事发生的频率

例如:经常、有时或从不。

程度副词主要是向
其他形容词或副词添加信息。

例如:非常、太或一点。

评论副词描述整个句子
或情况。

例如:不幸的是,基本上,或
显然。

在这里,您有五种不同类别的
副词。

大多数情况下,放置副词的位置
取决于副词的类型。

因此,例如,评论副词遵循与方式副词不同的
规则。

‘大多’?

为什么是“大部分”?

当然,也有例外!

请记住,尽可能相信自己的直觉。

现在,让我们看看如何
在英语句子中使用这些不同类型的副词。

方式副词在他们描述的动词或动词
短语之后。

例如:

他开得很慢。

她唱歌很好听。

在这里,您有非常简单的示例:动词
后跟副词。

请记住,方式副词也可以
跟随动词短语。

例如:

她没有很好地处理这种情况。

时间和地点副词通常放在
句子或短语的末尾,例如:

Let’s leave in half hour。

附近有银行吗?

如果两者都有,那么地点
副词在时间副词之前:

她十分钟前在这里。

频率副词通常放在
主要动词之前。

例如:

我通常起得很早。

他们几乎从不互相交谈。

这里有一个重要的例外:
如果主要动词是 be,频率副词

会在它之后:

他不经常那么健谈。

程度副词放在他们描述的词之前

:这里绝对冷!

她很平静地接受了这个消息。

评论副词通常放在
句子的开头:

基本上,你有两个选择。

最终,我们不得不承认事情并没有像
我们预期的那样发展。

这么多规矩!

了解规则是很好的,
或者知道在哪里可以找到它们以防万一您

想查找某些内容。

但是,您不需要一直将
所有这些都放在脑海中。

请记住,您可以(并且应该)使用您的
直觉。

最后,这里有两点
你可以记住并且你应该

记住的重要点:

第一:如果动词有两个部分,大多数副词
会放在中间,在主要动词之前。

试试看:看五个句子,把
副词放在正确的位置。

暂停视频,当你
认为你有答案时重新开始。

准备好?

让我们看看答案:

他们甚至没有告诉我们他们会迟到。

我刚刚和她谈过了。

他正迅速成为我们最有价值的
团队成员之一。

下周三我可能可以做到。

她并不总是这样。

你把它们弄好了吗?

这是一条有用的规则
,英语学习者在副词词序上犯的很多错误

都与这条规则有关,所以记住
它!

我们之前说过,有两点很重要

第二个是什么? 副词

可以有多个可能的
位置。

例如:

他有时会很喜怒无常。

有时,他可能非常喜怒无常。

这两种都是可能的。

第一个更常见,但第二个
也是正确的,如果你有时想强调这个词,你可以使用它

所以,如果你有两个选择,但你
不确定哪个是正确的,也许他们都是!

希望本课能帮助您理解
英语副词以及如何使用它们。

想要更多练习?

在 Oxford Online English dot com 上查看本课程的完整版本。

您可以通过测验检查您对本课程的理解

感谢收看!

下次见!