5. Tell us how something happened. They usually occur at the end of the sentence though sometimes they’re placed before the main verb.
6. Examples: • You can dance well. • She sang that song badly. • We carefully unwrapped the packaging.
7. Tell us when something happened. They usually occur at the beginning or the end of the sentence.
8. Examples: • I saw him last Sunday. • They met me here yesterday. • Next Thursday is my birthday. • Many of these adverbs do not have any special form and they are often a prepositional phrase.
9. Tell us where something happened. They usually occur at the end of the sentence.
10. Examples: • I saw him at the cinema. • They met me here yesterday. • Sometimes we can put them at the beginning of the sentence for emphasis: • In the middle of the road there was a dead cat. • Many of these adverbs do not have any special form and they are often prepositional phrases.
11. They usually come before the adjective or adverb they qualify, Some adverbs have the same form as the corresponding adjectives.
12. Examples: 1. You have guessed right. 2. How fast the tide ebbs! 3. The horse was sold cheap. 4. Tired men sleep sound. Other examples are wrong, straight, early, late, quick, hard, far, near, slow, high, low, loud, ill, well, deep, close, just, very, much, little.
13. Is a word which modifies a verb, an adjective or another adverb
14. They are classified into four according to their meaning as
15. De Modo - How?well, better, fast, slowly, carefully, easily, ...
16. De Lugar- Where?here, there, above, everywhere, away, ...
17. De Tiempo - When?now, early, late, soon, already, tomorrow,...
18. De Duración - How long?all week, for a while, since yesterday, ...
19. De Frecuencia - How often?always, never, often, once a day, ...
20. De Orden - In what order?firstly, secondly, lastly, finally, ...
21. De Grado - To what degree?very, completely, greatly, extremely, ...
22. De Certeza - How sure?certainly, indeed, of course, perhaps, ...