Dictionary Definition
adverb
Noun
1 the word class that qualifies verbs or
clauses
2 a word that modifies something other than a
noun
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From adverbium, from ad-#Latin + verbum.Pronunciation
- /ˈædvɜː(r)b/, /"
Extensive Definition
An adverb is a part of
speech. It is any word that modifies any other part of
language: verbs, adjectives (including
numbers), clauses,
sentences
and other adverbs, except for nouns; modifiers of nouns are
primarily determiners
and adjectives.
Adverbs typically answer
questions such as how?, when?, where?, why? and ''to what
extent?']
This function is called the
adverbial function,
and is realized not just by single words (i.e., adverbs) but by
adverbial
phrases and adverbial
clauses.
An adverb as an adverbial may
be a sentence
element in its own right.
- They treated her well. (SUBJECT)
- An extremely attractive woman entered the room. (SUBJECT + ADVERBIAL + OBJECT)
Adverbs in English
In English,
adverbs of manner (answering the question how?) are often formed by
adding -ly to adjectives. For example, great yields greatly, and
beautiful yields beautifully. (Note that some words that end in
-ly, such as friendly and lovely, are not adverbs, but adjectives,
in which case the root word is usually a noun. There are also
underived adjectives that end in -ly, such as holy and ugly.) The
suffix -ly derives from an Anglo-Saxon word meaning
"like".
In some cases, the suffix
-wise may be used to derive adverbs from nouns. Historically, -wise
competed with a related form -ways and won out against it. In a few
words, like sideways, -ways survives; words like clockwise show the
transition. Again, it is not a foolproof indicator of a word being
an adverb. Some adverbs are formed from nouns or adjectives by
appending the prefix a- (such as abreast, astray). There are a
number of other suffixes in English that derive adverbs from other
word classes, and there are also many adverbs that are not
morphologically indicated at all.
Comparative adverbs include
more, most, least, and less (in phrases such as more beautiful,
most easily etc.).
The usual form pertaining to
adjectives or adverbs is called the positive. Formally, adverbs in
English are inflected in terms of comparison,
just like adjectives.
The comparative and
superlative forms of
some (especially single-syllable) adverbs that do not end in -ly
are generated by adding -er and -est (She ran faster; He punches
hardest). Others, especially those ending -ly, are periphrastically compared
by the use of more or most (She ran more quickly). Adverbs also
take comparisons with as ... as, less, and least. Not all adverbs
are comparable; for example in the sentence He died yesterday it
does not make sense to speak of "more yesterday" or "most
yesterday".
Adverbs as a "catch-all" category
Adverbs are considered a part of speech in traditional English grammar and are still included as a part of speech in grammar taught in schools and used in dictionaries. However, modern grammarians recognize that words traditionally grouped together as adverbs serve a number of different functions. Some would go so far as to call adverbs a "catch-all" category that includes all words that don't belong to one of the other parts of speech.A more logical approach to
dividing words into classes relies on recognizing which words can
be used in a certain context. For example, a noun is a word that
can be inserted in the following template to form a grammatical
sentence:
- The _____ is red. (For example, "The hat is red.")
Words like very and
particularly afford another useful example. We can say Perry is
very fast, but not Perry very won the race. These words can modify
adjectives but not verbs. On the other hand, there are words like
here and there that cannot modify adjectives. We can say The sock
looks good there but not It is a there beautiful sock. The fact
that many adverbs can be used in more than one of these functions
can confuse this issue, and it may seem like splitting hairs to say
that a single adverb is really two or more words that serve
different functions. However, this distinction can be useful,
especially considering adverbs like naturally that have different
meanings in their different functions.
Not is an interesting case.
Grammarians have a difficult time categorizing it, and it probably
belongs in its own class (Haegeman 1995, Cinque 1999).
Adverbs in other languages
Other languages may form
adverbs in different ways, if they are used at all:
- In Dutch and German, adverbs have the basic form of their corresponding adjectives and are not inflected (except for comparison in which case they are inflected like adjectives, too). Consequently, German primary-school teaching uses a single term, Eigenschaftswort, to refer to both adjectives and adverbs. However German linguists avoid this term.
- In Scandinavian, adverbs are typically derived from adjectives by adding the suffix '-t', which makes it identical to the adjective's neuter form. Scandinavian adjectives, like English ones, are inflected in terms of comparison by adding '-ere'/'-are' (comparative) or '-est'/'-ast' (superlative). In inflected forms of adjectives the '-t' is absent. Periphrastic comparison is also possible.
- In Romance languages many adverbs are formed from adjectives (often the feminine form) by adding '-mente' (Portuguese, Spanish, Italian) or '-ment' (French, Catalan). Other adverbs are single forms which are invariable. In Romanian, the vast majority of adverbs are simply the masculine singular form of the corresponding adjective – one notable exception being bine ("well") / bun ("good").
- Interlingua also forms adverbs by adding '-mente' to the adjective. If an adjective ends in c, the adverbial ending is '-amente'. A few short, invariable adverbs, such as ben, "well", and mal, "badly", are available and widely used.
- In Esperanto, adverbs are not formed from adjectives but are made by adding '-e' directly to the word root. Thus, from bon are derived bone, "well", and 'bona', 'good'.
- Modern Standard Arabic forms adverbs by adding the indefinite accusative ending '-an' to the root. For example, kathiir-, "many", becomes kathiiran "much". However, Arabic often avoids adverbs by using a cognate accusative plus an adjective.
- Austronesian languages appear to form comparative adverbs by repeating the root (as in WikiWiki), similarly to the plural noun.
- Japanese forms adverbs, depending on the adjective's nature, either by changing the final syllable from い to く or by changing the particle that follows from な to に. Certain adjectives cannot be made into adverbs, among other restrictions on their use.
- In Gaelic, an adverbial form is made by preceding the adjective with the preposition go (Irish) or gu (Scottish Gaelic), meaning 'until'.
- In Modern Greek, an adverb is most commonly made by adding the endings and/or to the root of an adjective. Often, the adverbs formed form a common root using each of these endings have slightly different meanings. So, (, meaning "perfect" and "complete") yields (, "perfectly") and (, "completely"). Not all adjectives can be transformed into adverbs by using both endings. (, "rapid") becomes (, "rapidly"), but not normally * (*). When the ending is used to transform an adjective whose tonal accent is on the third syllable from the end, such as (, "official"), the corresponding adjective is accented on the second syllable from the end; compare () and (), which both mean "officially". There are also other endings with particular and restricted use as , , , etc. For example, (, "with impunity") and (, "indisputably"); ( "word for word") and (, "in no time"); [ "in English (language)"] and (, "by rote"); etc.
- In Latvian, an adverb is formed from an adjective, by changing the masculine or feminine adjective endings -s and -a to -i. "Labs", meaning "good", becomes "labi" for "well". Latvian adverbs have a particular use in expressions meaning "to speak" or "to understand" a language. Rather than use the noun meaning "Latvian/English/Russian", the adverb formed form these words is used. "Es runāju latviski/angliski/krieviski" means "I speak Latvian/English/Russian", or very literally "I speak Latvianly/Englishly/Russianly". When a noun is required, the expression used means literally "language of the Latvians/English/Russians", "latviešu/angļu/krievu valoda".
- In Ukrainian, an adverb is formed by removing the adjectival suffices "-ий" "-а" or "-е" from an adjective, and replacing them with the adverbial "-о". For example, "швидкий", "гарна", and "добре" (fast, nice, good) become "швидко", "гарно", and "добре" (quickly, nicely, well). As well, note that adverbs are placed before the verbs they modify: "Добрий син гарно співає." (A good son sings niceley/well)
- In Korean, adverbs are formed by replacing 다 of the dictionary form of a verb with 게. So, 쉽다 (easy) becomes 쉽게 (easily).
- In Turkish, the same word usually serves as adjective and adverb: iyi bir kız ("a good girl"), iyi anlamak ("to understand well'').
References
- Cinque, Guglielmo. 1999. Adverbs and functional heads -- a crosslinguistic perspective. Oxford: Oxford University press.
- Ernst, Thomas. 2002. The syntax of adjuncts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Haegeman, Liliane. 1995. The syntax of negation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Jackendoff, Ray. 1972. Semantic Interpretation in Generative Grammar. MIT Press,
See also
External links
adverb in Bosnian:
Prilozi
adverb in Breton:
Adverb
adverb in Bulgarian:
Наречие
adverb in Catalan:
Adverbi
adverb in Chuvash:
Наречи
adverb in Czech:
Příslovce
adverb in Danish:
Biord
adverb in German:
Adverb
adverb in Spanish:
Adverbio
adverb in Esperanto:
Adverbo
adverb in French:
Adverbe
adverb in Scottish Gaelic:
Co-ghnìomhair
adverb in Galician:
Adverbio
adverb in Croatian:
Prilozi
adverb in Indonesian:
Adverbia
adverb in Icelandic:
Atviksorð
adverb in Italian:
Avverbio
adverb in Kazakh:
Үстеу
adverb in Latin:
Adverbium
adverb in Lingala:
Lilandi
adverb in Malayalam:
ക്രിയാവിശേഷണം
adverb in Dutch:
Bijwoord
adverb in Japanese:
副詞
adverb in Norwegian:
Adverb
adverb in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Adverb
adverb in Polish:
Przysłówek
adverb in Portuguese:
Advérbio
adverb in Romanian:
Adverb
adverb in Quechua:
Hinarimana
adverb in Russian:
Наречие
adverb in Simple English:
Adverb
adverb in Slovak:
Príslovka
adverb in Serbian:
Прилози
adverb in Serbo-Croatian:
Prilog (gramatika)
adverb in Finnish:
Adverbi
adverb in Swedish:
Adverb
adverb in Tagalog:
Pang-abay
adverb in Turkish:
Belirteç
adverb in Ukrainian:
Прислівник
adverb in Walloon:
Adviebe
adverb in Yiddish:
אדווערב
adverb in Chinese:
副詞
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
adjectival, adjective, adverbial, adversative
conjunction, attributive, conjunction, conjunctive
adverb, coordinating conjunction, copulative, copulative
conjunction, correlative conjunction, disjunctive, disjunctive
conjunction, exclamatory noun, form class, form word, function
class, gerundive,
interjection, part
of speech, participle, particle, past participle,
perfect participle, preposition, present
participle, subordinating conjunction, verbal
adjective