Adverb Phrases
Adverb Phrases
Adverb Phrases
An adverb phrase consists of one or more words. The adverb is the head of the phrase
and can appear alone or it can be modified by other words. Adverbs are one of the four
major word classes, along with nouns, verbs and adjectives.
In the examples the adverb phrases are in bold. The other words that modify the adverb
are underlined:
We kept the new money quite separately from what we’d already
collected.
See also:
Adjective phrases
An adverb phrase can consist of one adverb or an adverb plus other words before it
(premodification) or after it (postmodification). Adverb phrases have many different
meanings.
In the examples the adverb phrases are in bold. The other words that modify the adverb
are underlined.
used to give
example type
information about
when something
Dad got home very late. time
happens
This pill will take away the pain how long something
duration
temporarily. happens
A:
Want some sugar in your coffee?
focusing something specific
B:
Only half a spoon, please.
happens
See also:
Adverbs: types
We use adverb phrases most commonly to modify verbs. In the examples the adverb
phrases are in bold. The verbs that they modify are underlined:
We use adverb phrases with be. This is especially typical of adverbs of place:
We use adverb phrases (adv) to modify noun phrases (np) and prepositional phrases:
That’s [ADV]quite [NP]a tree. (it’s a tree that is special in some way, e.g.
it’s very big)
We climbed [ADV]right [prepositional phrase]over the top of the hill and down
again.
Adverb phrases + determiners
We use adverb phrases to modify determiners, especially words like all, some, half, many
(quantifiers):
An adverb phrase (or adverbial phrase) is a word group with an adverb as its head. This
adverb may be accompanied by modifiers or qualifiers.
An adverb phrase can modify a verb, an adjective, another adverb, or even an entire
sentence or main clause. As show below, it can appear in a number of different positions in
a sentence.
The Cheshire Cat vanished quite slowly, beginning with the end of its tail.
The players responded surprisingly well to all the pressures of the playoffs.
The best way to preserve the flavor and texture of fresh vegetables is to cook them
as quickly as possible.
As quickly as possible we cleaned the fish and placed them in coolers.
The air was warm, stirred only occasionally by a breeze.
Only occasionally is there a rumble in the sky or a hint of rain.
"If youth be a defect, it is one that we outgrow only too soon." (James Russell
Lowell)
Snow fell much earlier than usual.
"Bernie watched Jim's face for a reaction. Surprisingly enough, he grinned."
(Beverly Barton, Close Enough to Kill. Kensington, 2011)
My daughter's choice of driving music is, surprisingly enough, classic rock.
Adverbial phrases are so-called because they can occur in the same range of positions as
single adverbs; but many such adverbial phrases, paradoxically, do not contain an adverb.
Such adverb-less adverbial phrases are typically prepositional phrases, as [italicized] in the
"Like adverbs, adverb phrases can cause confusion because there is some flexibility in
where they occur within sentences, and even in modifying the sentence structure. As well,
adverb phrases are sometimes embedded into other phrases.
"Examples are:
a. 'Laura, a better, gentler, more beautiful Laura, whom everybody, everybody loved dearly
and tenderly.' [Norris]
[ADVERB PHRASE]
b. 'He had taken her hand sympathizingly, forgivingly, but his silence made me curious.'
[Michelson]
[ADVERB PHRASE]
c. 'David, on the lowest step, was very evidently not hearing a word of what was being said.'
[Porter]
[ADVERB PHRASE EMBEDDED INTO VERB PHRASE]
Our first example identifies an adverb phrase following the verb loved; the next example
shows an adverb phrase following the noun hand and removed from the verb it modifies;
the third example has an adverb phrase embedded into a verb phrase was . . . hearing. Such
flexibility makes it more difficult to identify these phrases; therefore, noting the head
adverb can be of help." (Bernard O'Dwyer, Modern English Structures: Form, Function,
and Position. Broadview, 2006)