Performdigi: Simple Adverbs
Performdigi: Simple Adverbs
Performdigi: Simple Adverbs
Types of Adverb
3 types of adverb
1. Simple Adverb
2. Relative adverb
3. Interrogative adverb
Read all 3 types of adverb in detail (list of adverb is also given).
1. Simple Adverbs
It denotes time, place, number, frequency of
manner, reason, degree, affirmation, or negation.
Examples:
1. He works honestly.
2. He walks slowly.
The adverb ending in ‘ly‘ generally comes under adverb of manner.
Slow Slowly
Glad Gladly
Honest Honestly
Miser, niggard, scholar, and coward, are few nouns in which we often
confuse between their adjective and adverb forms.
Noun Adjective form Adverb form
Rule-1
‘Else’ is followed by ‘but’ and ‘rather’, ‘other’ and ‘otherwise’ follows than.
Examples:
(i) I would rather die than beg.
(ii) It is nothing else than sheer foolishness. (Use ‘but’ in place of ‘than‘)
(iii) Rahul had no other alternative but to work hard. (Use ‘than’ in place of
‘but’)
(iv) Rohit has no one else to talk to except his wife. (Use ‘but’ in place of
‘except’)
Rule-2
Adverbs, Seldom, never, nowhere, nothing, hardly, scarcely, neither, barely,
rarely are negative in meaning.
Examples:
1. I rarely went to meet nobody. (Use ‘anybody’ in place of ‘nobody‘)
2. She hardly knows nothing about me. (Use ‘anything’ in place of
‘nothing‘)
3. I hardly know somebody in the city. (Say ‘anybody’ in place of
‘somebody’)
Rule-3
Negative words like not/never is not used
with deny, forbid, both, unless, until, lest, hardly, scarcely, rarely, seldom an
d too…to.
1. She denied that she had not done anything wrong. (Delete ‘not’)
2. Both of us are not going there.
Neither of us is going there.
3. Unless he will not comes, I will not go.
Unless he comes, I will not go.
4. He did not deny that he was not present at the scene of crime
(Meaning- He accepted that he was present there.)