Collins Cobuild English Grammar (125 page)

BOOK: Collins Cobuild English Grammar
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He began to behave
more and more erratically
.
Omoro didn’t want to express it
any more strongly
.

the optional use of
the
with superlatives: see paragraph
2.117

His shoulders hurt
the worst
.
Old people work
hardest
.

the use of words like
much
or
a little
with comparatives and superlatives: see the section beginning at paragraph
2.157

The situation resolved itself
much more easily
than I had expected.
There the process progresses
even more rapidly
.

the use of
than
after comparatives: see paragraph
2.106

This class continues to grow
more rapidly than any other group
.
Prices have been rising
faster than incomes
.
You might know this
better than me
.

repeating comparatives to show changes in extent: see paragraph
2.161

He began to behave
more and more erratically
.

Adverbs of manner

adverbs of manner

6.36
    You often want to say something about the way something is done or about the circumstances of an event or situation. The most common way of doing this is by using
adverbs of manner
. Adverbs of manner give more information about the way in which an event or action takes place.
He nodded and smiled
warmly
.
She
accidentally
shot herself in the foot.

how something is done:
sing beautifully
,
walk briskly

6.37
    Many adverbs of manner are used to describe the way in which something is done. For example, in the sentence
He did it carefully
,
carefully
means
in a careful way
.
They think, dress and live
differently
.
He acted very
clumsily
.
You must be able to speak
fluently
and
correctly
.
6.38
    Here is a list of common
-ly
adverbs that describe the way in which something is done:
abruptly
accurately
awkwardly
badly
beautifully
brightly
brilliantly
briskly
carefully
carelessly
casually
cheaply
clearly
closely
clumsily
comfortably
consistently
conveniently
correctly
dangerously
delicately
differently
discreetly
distinctly
dramatically
easily
economically
effectively
efficiently
evenly
explicitly
faintly
faithfully
fiercely
finely
firmly
fluently
formally
frankly
freely
gently
gracefully
hastily
heavily
honestly
hurriedly
intently
meticulously
neatly
nicely
oddly
patiently
peacefully
peculiarly
perfectly
plainly
pleasantly
politely
poorly
professionally
properly
quietly
rapidly
readily
richly
rigidly
roughly
ruthlessly
securely
sensibly
sharply
silently
simply
smoothly
softly
solidly
specifically
splendidly
steadily
steeply
stiffly
strangely
subtly
superbly
swiftly
systematically
tenderly
thickly
thinly
thoroughly
thoughtfully
tightly
truthfully
uncomfortably
urgently
vaguely
vigorously
violently
vividly
voluntarily
warmly
widely
willingly
wonderfully

feelings and manner:
smile happily
,
walk wearily

6.39
    Adverbs formed from adjectives that describe people’s feelings, for example
happily
or
nervously
, indicate both the way in which something is done and the feelings of the person who does it.

For example, the sentence
She laughed happily
means both that she laughed in a happy way and that she was feeling happy.

We laughed and chatted
happily
together.
Gaskell got up
wearily
and headed for the stairs.
They looked
anxiously
at each other.
The children waited
eagerly
for their presents.
The children smiled
shyly
.
BOOK: Collins Cobuild English Grammar
11.61Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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