19 Adjectives: (8) : What Can Follow An Adjective?
19 Adjectives: (8) : What Can Follow An Adjective?
19 Adjectives: (8) : What Can Follow An Adjective?
20 adverb particles
1 adverb particles and prepositions
Words like down, in, up are not always prepositions. Compare:
- I ran down the road. - He's in his office.
Please sit down. You can go in.
- Something's climbing up my leg.
She's not up yet.
In the expressions down the road, in his office and up my leg, the words down,
in and up are prepositions: they have objects (the road. his office and my leg).
In sit down, go in and She's not up, the words down, in and up have no objects.
They are adverbs, not prepositions.
Small adverbs like these are usually called 'adverb(ial) particles'. They include
above, about, across, ahead, along, (a) round, aside, away, back, before, behind,
below, by, down, forward, in, home, near, off, on, out, over, past, through,
under, up. Many words of this kind can be used as both adverb particles
and prepositions, but there are some exceptions: for example back, away
(only adverb particles)j /rom, during (only prepositions).
2 phrasal verbs
Adverb particles often join together with verbs to make two-word verbs,
sometimes with completely new meanings (e.g. break down, put off, work out,
give up). These are often called 'phrasal verbs'. For details of their use, see 599.
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adverb position (1): introduction 21
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adverb position (2): front position 22
Adverbs of manner (how), place (where) and time (when) most often go in
end position.
She brushed her hair slowly. The children are playing upstairs.
I phoned Alex this morning.
Time adverbs can also go in front position.
Tomorrow I've got a meeting in Cardiff.
For more details about the position of these and other kinds of adverb, see the next four sections.
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