KINDS
OF ADVERBS
ADVERBS
OF PLACE
Adverbs of place
tell us where something happens.
They are usually placed after the main verb or after the object:
Example:
after
the main verb:
- I looked everywhere
- John looked
away,
up, down, around...
- I'm going
home, out,
back
- Come in
after
the object:
- They built
a house nearby
- She took the
child outside
'Here'
and 'there'
With verbs of movement,
here means towards or with the speaker:
- Come here
(= towards me)
- It's in here
(= come with me to see it)
There means
away from, or not with the speaker:
- Put it there
(= away from me)
- It's in there
(= go by yourself to see it)
Here
and there are combined with prepositions to make many
common adverbial phrases:
down
here, down there;
over
here, over there;
under
here, under there;
up
here, up there
Here
and there are placed at the beginning of the sentence
in exclamations or when emphasis is needed.
They are followed
by the verb if the subject is a noun:
- Here
comes the bus. (followed by the verb)
Or by a pronoun
if this is the subject (it, she, he etc.):
- Here
it
is! (followed by the pronoun)
- There
she goes! (followed by the pronoun)
NOTE: most
common adverbs of place also function as prepositions.
Examples:
about, across,
along, around, behind, by, down, in, off, on, over, round, through,
under, up.
Go to Prepositions
or Phrasal Verbs
Other adverbs
of place: ending
in '-wards', expressing movement in a particular direction:
|
backwards
forwards
downwards
upwards
inwards
outwards
|
northwards
southwards
eastwards
westwards
homewards
onwards
|
Example:
- Cats don't usually
walk backwards.
- The ship sailed
westwards.
BE
CAREFUL! 'Towards'
is a preposition, not an adverb, so it is always followed by
a noun or a pronoun:
- He walked towards
the car.
- She ran towards
me.
expressing both
movement and location:
ahead,
abroad, overseas, uphill, downhill, sideways, indoors, outdoors
Example:
- The child went
indoors.
- He lived and
worked abroad.