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Unit 10: Parts of Speech and Common Errors in English




          5.   Adverbs of number describe “how often’.                                          notes


                 Example: I once saw a yellow beetle.
          6.   Adverbs of interrogation are used in questions

                 Example: Where do you stay?

          7.   Adverbs of affirmation/negation.

                 Example: They are not here.

          adjuncts, Disjuncts and conjuncts

          Regardless of its position, an adverb is often neatly integrated into the flow of a sentence. When
          this is true, as it almost always is, the adverb is called an adjunct. (Notice the underlined adjuncts
          or adjunctive adverbs in the first two sentences of this paragraph.) When the adverb does not fit
          into the flow of the clause, it is called a disjunct or a conjunct and is often set off by a comma
          or set of commas. A disjunct frequently acts as a kind of evaluation of the rest of the sentence.
          Although it usually modifies the verb, we could say that it modifies the entire clause, too. Notice
          how “too” is a disjunct in the sentence immediately before this one; that same word can also
          serve as an adjunct adverbial modifier: It’s too hot to play outside. Here are two more disjunctive
          adverbs:


                 Example: 1.   Frankly, Mary, I don’t give a damn.
                         2.  Fortunately, no one was hurt.
          Conjuncts, on the other hand, serve a connector function within the flow of the text, signaling a
          transition between ideas.

                   Example: 1.  If they start smoking those awful cigars, then I’m not staying.
                         2.   We’ve told the landlord about this ceiling again and again, and yet he’s
                            done nothing to fix it.
          At  the  extreme  edge  of  this  category,  we  have  the  purely  conjunctive  device  known  as  the
          conjunctive adverb (often called the adverbial conjunction):


                 Example: John  has  spent  years  preparing  for  this  event;  nevertheless,  he’s  the  most
          nervous person here.
             I love this school; however, I don’t think I can afford the tuition.

          relative adverbs

          Adjectival clauses are sometimes introduced by what are called the relative adverbs: where, when,
          and why. Although the entire clause is adjectival and will modify a noun, the relative word itself
          fulfills an adverbial function (modifying a verb within its own clause).
          The relative adverb where will begin a clause that modifies a noun of place:

                 Example: My  entire  family  now  worships  in  the  church  where  my  great  grandfather
          used to be minister.




                                           lovely Professional university                                   141
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