Adjectives are usually pretty obvious.
The
little girl in the
yellow dress ate a
red apple on the
city bus.
Adjectives offer a description, answer the question "what kind of?"
Adverbs are often obvious too:
The boy went
slowly and
unwillingly to school.
These adverbs answer the questions how, when, why, where.
There's another kind of adverbs. They're the words that describe adjectives.
I'm
very happy to see you.
She's
too old to go waterskiing.
His behaviour was
extremely ignorant.
Or an adverb can desribe another adverb:
The bear ran
very fast.
Don't eat
too much.
But always keep in mind that English words are more flexible than words in other European languages. One word can fit into many categories:
I love you. (verb)
They're in love. (noun)
She had a love child. (adjective)
This sort of flexibility is extremely important in English.
For example, I said above that adjectives are "pretty" obvious. Pretty looks like an adjective, but here it's an adverb, describing obvious, which is an adjective.
And I said "city bus." City looks like a noun, and it usually is a noun, but here it's an adjective, telling you what kind of bus.
English is different. That's one of the reasons you'll love English.
regards
edward
Quote:
Originally Posted by svartnik I am going to describe the difference in broad brush strokes:
Adjectives describe or qualify nouns while adverbs do so with verbs, adverbs and adjectives.
red = ?
very = ?
much = ?
IYO? |