Adjective or Adverb?
Hallo,
ich bin mir bei den zwei folgenden Sätzen nicht sicher, ob da wirklich ein Adverb stehen muss:
- I tried to cook them as well as possible.
- I hope they won’t turn out badly.
Bezieht sich das good beim ersten Satz auf them? Und kann nach turn out ein Adverb folgen?
Bitte eine Erklärung! Vielen Dank
In both sentences, the adverb becomes “well” or “badly” used to use the verb “cook” or modify “turn out” and thus express how good or bad the action is performed.
In the first sentence “I tried to cook them as well as possible”, the adverb “well” refers to the verb “cook”, and not to “them”. The adverb “well” thus describes the quality of the action (in this case cooking), not the quality of the object (in this case eating).
In the second sentence “I hope they won’t turn out badly” “badly” is an adverb that modifies the verb “turn out” and describes how the food ultimately becomes. It is correct that after “turn out” an adverb can follow to modify the verb.
Overall, both sentences are grammatically correct and use adverbs to modify the verb.
Hello,
as you learn nothing from the prediction and from the fact that we do this here – your motto should Learning by doing! be – there are only grammar from me here as a help for self-help:
while Adjective (property word) describes a person, an animal or an object in more detail,
Examples:
– a beautiful girl; The girl is beautiful. (How is the girl? – beautiful)
– a careful driver; The driver is careful. (How is the driver?)
– to honest answer (How’s the answer?
describes Adverb a verb closer, as the name says.
Examples:
– The girl sings beautifully (How does the girl sing? – beautiful)
– The driver drive carefully (How did the driver drive?)
– She answered honestly (How did she answer?
In English, the adjective is a -ly to make an adverb.
No rule without exception for example:
To Adverbs who not on –ly ending, including:
– Adj. good – Adv. well,
– Adj. fast – Adv. fast,
– hard = heavy (adj. and adv),
but hardly
– long, fast, fair, straight, near, high
Again other adverbs have the same form as the adjective:
– early, daily, weekly, monthly, yearly
– e.g.
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In adjectives on -ly – friendly, silly, lively, lovely – used in a …. way.
Hey! is the best. (Adjective)
Hey! speaks in a friendly way (Adverb)
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Attention!
After verbs of perception, no adverb is used:
– feel = feel
– smell = smell
– taste = taste
– sound = sound
– look = look (like)
So it must be:
– It sounds so beautiful.
– It feels good.
– The soup tastes delicious.
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The adverb can also describe an adjective in more detail.
The computer was terribly expensive. (verb – adverb – adjective)
In addition, the adverb can also describe an adverb in more detail.
They are fast. (verb – adverb – adverb)
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You can also find rules and exercises on the Internet, e.g. ego4u.de and germany.de.
I hope I could help you.
AstridDerPu
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiN6KOAqiag