15 Manner, Means and Instrument
15 Manner, Means and Instrument
15 Manner, Means and Instrument
SUMMARY
INTRODUCTION
01. EXPRESSION OF MANNER.
02. EXPRESSION OF MEANS AND INSTRUMENT.
03. THE INTERSECTION BETWEEN MANNER, MEANS AND INSTRUMENT.
INTRODUCTION.
If you want to specify ‘how’ an action is performed or ‘how’ an event takes place, you
can use an adverbial of Manner, Means, or Instrument.
You can ask a more specific question about the instrument with which an action is
performed as follows:
A/ Adverbs phrases expressing manner: open-class adverbs: -ly and also -wise, -
like, -fashion, -style.
B/ Prepositional phrases expressing manner: with, in ... manner, like; distinction
between expression with like (manner)/ as (resemblance).
C/ Noun phrases expressing manner: (in) the way, the manner, the style.
D/ Clauses expressing manner: as/ as if/ (exactly) as/ (just) as/ how (often in
substandard English).
Most adjectives have matching ‘-ly’ adverbs, and many adjectives have matching
abstract nouns. Thus there may be three ways of expressing the same idea:
He spoke …
a/ confidently
b/ in a confident manner/ way
c/ with confidence
Adverbs as heads of a manner phrase are an open class. The main method of
forming manner adverbs is by adding a ‘-ly’ suffix to an adjective. Examples:
Three minor methods are by adding ‘-wise’, ‘-style’, or ‘-fashion’ to a noun; eg:
‘snake-wise’, ‘cowboy-style’, ‘peasant-fashion’. With these forms the prepositional
paraphrase would include postmodification: ‘in the manner of a snake’, ‘in the style of
cowboys’, in the fashion of peasants’.
Note that ‘like’ with intensive verbs, ‘as’ in ‘Life is like a dream’, refers not to manner
but to resemblance.
he spoke …
like a lawyer (after the manner of …)
as a lawyer (in the capacity of …)
Clauses of Manner indicate how an action is done. They are introduced by as/ as if/
(exactly) as/ (just) as/ how (often used to introduce clauses of manner in
substandard English): please do it (exactly) as I instructed (=in the way that ...)/ he does just as he likes/
he talks as if he owned the place/ please do it exactly as I instructed.
Some manner clauses involve comparison: they hunted him as a tiger stalks his prey (=in a
manner similar to).
If an as-clause is placed initially, the correlative form so, in formal literary English,
may introduce the main clause: (Just) as a moth is attracted by a light, (so) he was fascinated by her/
as the tiger stalks his prey, (so) they hunted him.
notice that ‘in’ can be omitted before ‘way’ in certain <informal> constructions:
she sings like a professional (ie, ‘in the manner of a professional, as well as a
professional’)
1) Means and instrument are commonly by prepositional phrases and answer the
question How...?,
There is a correspondence of sentences of this kind with human subject & a direct
object and sentences with the verb use:
There is also an alternative construction in which the noun phrase denoting the
instrument becomes the subject:
For most senses of ‘with’, including that of instrument, ‘without’ expressed the
equivalent negative meaning:
how did he get it? – he came through the window (more usual than by the window)
how did you hear the news? – I heard it on the radio (compare: they sent the
message by radio)
6) The article is omitted in phrases with ‘by’ denoting communication: ‘by car’, ‘by
train’, ‘by letter’, ‘by post’, ‘by radio’.
A) Adverb phrases with a derived adverb in ‘-ly’ as head may (not very commonly)
function as ‘means’, denoting by what means the event referred to by the predicator
takes place.
the student was politely [A1] assessed by the teacher [A2], impressionistically [A3]
by means of an interview [A4]
the patient was carefully [A1] treated by the nurse [A2] medically [A3] with a well-
tried drug [A4]
In each sentence, [A1] is manner, [A2] an agent, [A3] means and [A4] instrument.
But although the distinction may seem especially close only between means and
instrument, it should be noted that manner is not necessarily always distinguished
clearly from them. In principle, the distinction is clear enough: manner is relatively
subjective and hence gradable: quite politely, very carefully, means and instrumente
are objective and hence nongradable: *very surgically. But consider the following
sentence:
Here we may be unsure whether the adverbial means ‘in a quite impressionistic
manner’, ‘subjectively’, or ‘by means of an impression-forming technique’. And even
if the means sense seemed to be endorsed by co-occurrence with an ‘instrument’
adverbial, cooccurrence with a manner adverbial like ‘casually’ would interact
semantically so as to make ‘impressionistically’ equivocal between means and
manner:
Again, we are very dependent on the wider context in interpreting a sentence such
as:
The adverbial here may be manner (quite legally, not illegally), means (by invoking
the law), instrument (with legal arguments).
In short, most of the adverbs that can realize means and instrument can also
function as manner; in consequence, there is some danger of misunderstanding.