Adverbs add information to verbs. They can be used to tell us how, where, when or how often something happens. Below are some rules of correct adverb formation.
Some adverbs may look the same as adjectives. This includes words like hard, fast, well and late. It also includes words like daily, weekly, monthly and yearly, which are used to talk about how often something happens:
Adjective | Adverb |
Jerry has a fast horse. I have a yearly eye test. I don’t feel well. | Henry can run fast. I have my eyes tested yearly. The project is not going well. |
Derived adverbs are often formed by adding –ly to the end of an adjective. The suffix ‘-ly’ usually tells us that the word is an adverb and tells us how something happens:
Adjective | Adverb |
He was slow. Freya sang. She was quiet. Ryan was careful with the box. | He moved slowly. Freya sang quietly. Ryan carried the box carefully. |
Adverbs that come from adjectives ending in -y will end in -ily:
We don’t add-ly to adjectives that end in -ly:
Note: Remember, adverbs add information to verbs. Adjectives are used to describe nouns. Do not confuse adverbs with adjectives that end in -ly: – The party was lively. (Party is a noun. Therefore, lively is an adjective.) |
Most simple adverbs and derived adverbs ending in -ly are gradable, which means we can use more than one adverb to give extra information. We often add really, very, extremely, completely, fairly, rather or quite:
A small number of derived adverbs end in –ward(s) or -wise. These are not gradable. Adverbs ending in -ward(s) include upwards, downwards, inwards, outwards, eastwards, westwards, northwards and southwards:
Adverbs ending in -wise include clockwise, anticlockwise, lengthwise and likewise:
Compound adverbs are formed when two words are paired together. This includes words like everywhere, anywhere, sometimes, downstairs, upstairs and meanwhile:
Composite adverbs are made up of multiple words. This includes phrases like all of a sudden, at first, by all means, as far as and for ever:
Note: Adverbs ending in -ward(s) can end in either -ward or -wards: – outward/outwards – upward/upwards – downward/downwards |
Watch this video from Englishgrammarspot and learn what types of adverbs we can use and how to form them:
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