He would probably have been justified.

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99bottles

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One time, long ago, I saw somewhere that the adverb usually goes after the first auxilliary verb. A while ago, on a thread I made on this forum, you told me that whoever said that did not know what they were talking about and the adverb goes after all auxilliary verbs and before the main verb. Now, on the thread above, an English speaking person (Post #2) says that it goes after the first auxilliary. I'm feeling dizzy! o_O

Edit: The thread I made here, where you told me it goes after all auxilliaries, was 'must have accidentally dropped vs must accidentally have dropped'.
 
The thread I made here, where you told me it goes after all auxilliaries, was 'must have accidentally dropped vs must accidentally have dropped'.
Could you give us a link to that thread, please.
 
Could you give us a link to that thread, please.
I hope you appreciate the hell I went through to find this link. 😅

 
I hope you appreciate the hell I went through to find this link. 😅

I don't appreciate wasting my time. I found that thread with very little problem, but carried on searching because you told us the thread was titled 'must have accidentally dropped vs must accidentally have dropped'. You also said you told me that whoever said that did not know what they were talking about and the adverb goes after all auxiliary verbs and before the main verb. I can't find those words in that thread.

Perhaps it might be better if you simply asked us one simple question, without worrying about your memory of what you read long ago or expecting us to flick from this page, to a WordRef page and to an earlier thread in this forum.
 
I say, as I said in the other post, that it depends on the kind of adverb. Adverbs that carry a sense of modality (e.g. probably) operate on the first auxiliary (the modal verb), and so typically go directly after the first auxiliary. If the adverb is modifying the main verb (e.g. adverbs of manner), then it typically goes proximate to the main verb.
 
Auxiliary only has one l. You're probably feeling dizzy because you are combining suggestions and trying to turn them into rules, and ignoring features of the suggestions.
 
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