Adverbial phrase: Difference between revisions
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*''I'll go to bed '''soon'''''. |
*''I'll go to bed '''soon'''''. |
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*''I'll go to bed '''in an hour'''''. |
*''I'll go to bed '''in an hour'''''. |
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*''I'll go to |
*''I'll go to toilet '''when I've finished my book'''''. |
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In the first, ''soon'' is an [[adverb]] (as distinct from a [[noun]] or [[verb]]), and it is an [[adverbial]] (as distinct from a [[Subject (grammar)|subject]] or [[Object (grammar)|object]]). Clearly, in the second sentence, ''in an hour'' has the same syntactic function, though it does not contain an adverb; therefore, a phrase consisting of a [[Preposition and postposition|preposition]] and a noun (preceded by its [[Article (grammar)|article]]) can function as an adverbial and is called an adverbial phrase. In the third sentence, we see a whole [[clause]] functioning as an adverbial; it is termed an [[adverbial clause]]. |
In the first, ''soon'' is an [[adverb]] (as distinct from a [[noun]] or [[verb]]), and it is an [[adverbial]] (as distinct from a [[Subject (grammar)|subject]] or [[Object (grammar)|object]]). Clearly, in the second sentence, ''in an hour'' has the same syntactic function, though it does not contain an adverb; therefore, a phrase consisting of a [[Preposition and postposition|preposition]] and a noun (preceded by its [[Article (grammar)|article]]) can function as an adverbial and is called an adverbial phrase. In the third sentence, we see a whole [[clause]] functioning as an adverbial; it is termed an [[adverbial clause]]. |
Revision as of 19:45, 4 March 2016
In linguistics, an adverbial phrase is a group of two or more words operating adverbially, meaning that their syntactic function is to modify a verb, an adjective, or an adverb. Adverbial phrases ("AdvP" in syntactic trees) are phrases that do the work of an adverb in a sentence.
Description
Compare the following sentences:
- I'll go to bed soon.
- I'll go to bed in an hour.
- I'll go to toilet when I've finished my book.
In the first, soon is an adverb (as distinct from a noun or verb), and it is an adverbial (as distinct from a subject or object). Clearly, in the second sentence, in an hour has the same syntactic function, though it does not contain an adverb; therefore, a phrase consisting of a preposition and a noun (preceded by its article) can function as an adverbial and is called an adverbial phrase. In the third sentence, we see a whole clause functioning as an adverbial; it is termed an adverbial clause.
Like adverbs, complex adverbials can describe:
- Time (answers the question 'When?')
- She will be arriving in a short time.
- Place (answers the question Where?')
- She is waiting near the wall.
- Manner (answers the question 'How?')
- They are discussing the matter in a civilized way.
Distribution
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2014) |
Adverbs modify the functional categories that occur in a sentence and may also be treated as predicates which are functionally open and require one or more arguments to be satisfied.[1] It has been argued that the distribution of adverbs is largely conditioned by their lexical nature or thematic properties.[1]
See also
References