Panel | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
If someone greets you and asks you, “How are you?” you might be surprised to find that it is nonstandard to respond “Good” or “I’m doing good.” The issue involved here is choosing an adverb instead of an adjective. Here are three important things you should know about adverbs. a. Adverbs describe verbs, adverbs, and adjectives (but they won’t describe nouns). b. The English language regularly forms adverbs by adding –ly to adjectives (although that’s not the only form in which adverbs appear). c. We use them adverbs to answer the questions how, when, where, why, and to what extent. In the sentences below, the adverbs are in italics. I played noisily during the contest. I took the guitar and smashed it slowly into the amp. The amp crashed loudly into the curtain. The curtain quietly ripped and fell softly on my head. I cried unhappily. Notice in the sentencesthat all the adverbs in these sentences answer the question “how” about the verbsthe verbs: how the individual “played”—“noisilyplayed (noisily), ”how the guitar “smashed” — “slowly,”smashed ( slowly), how the amp “crashed” —“loudly,”crashed (loudly), how the curtain “ripped” — “quietly,”ripped (quietly), how the curtain “fell” —“softly,”fell (softly), and how the individual “cried” — “unhappily.”cried (unhappily). These examples lead us to a rule. |
Panel | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
Writers are much less inclined to make mistakes when action verbs like those above are described with adverbs like those above. In such cases, writers rarely accidentally use an adjective instead of an adverb. One instance is the nonstandard sentence we started with. We don’t often say “I played noisy” or “I cried unhappy.” But the use of “good” (usually an adjective, though it can be a noun) and “well” (usually an adverb, but it can be an adjective—see below) can be confusing. Nonstandard How am I doing? I am doing good. Standard How am I doing? I am doing well. Because the word “doing” is an action verb, we use the adverb “well,” answering how the individual is doing, instead of using the adjective “good.” There are appropriate circumstances when it appears as if an adjective is being used Our next rule will show that it’s appropriate to use an adjective with another kind of verb, : a state-of-being verb. |
Panel | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
The following sentence is standard. Standard The dog is good. Here the word “is” is a state-of-being verb, a form of the verb to be. State-of-being verbs (sometimes called linking verbs) include the following: to be (am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been) became, appear, grow, keep, remain, seem, stay, loom, prove, turn sound, smell, look, feel, taste (These five can also be action verbs.) When a state-of-being verb is involved, writers in standard written English use an adjective instead of an adverb. The adjective describes the noun that is usually the subject. Therefore, an adjective, rather than an adverb, should be used in such cases. Perhaps you’ve said the following nonstandard sentence. Nonstandard I feel badly. Standard I feel bad. Examine these examples, comparing the use of adjectives and adverbs: Standard Sentences The quick fox jumped over the dogs. The fox jumped quickly over the dogs. The fox was quick. The question of whether to use an adjective or an adverb is primary in the consideration of deciding whether to use the adverb well or the adjective good in any given situation. In most cases, when well is used as an adverb, it is used to describe verbs. It does not follow a state-of-being verb. (Please note that to do and to go are not state-of-being verbs.) Well describes ordinary verbs. I sing Well does not describe state-of-being verbs. I smell An exception to these is that well can be an adjective describing health: “After being ill for a week, I finally feel well.” Returning to the examples above with “well” and “good” substituted for “quickly” and “quick” will enable us to see where an adjective is required and where an adverb is the correct option. Standard Sentences The good fox jumped over the dogs. The fox jumped well. The fox was good. The same rules apply when you’re trying to decide between bad and badly. Here are some standard sentences to study in that regard. Standard Sentences On a cold day, a bowl of hot soup never tastes bad. At the end of the game, the hometown crowd felt bad for the losing pitcher. It was something of a tragedy, but the pitcher played badly in that game. |
Panel | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
In another circumstance, writers occasionally use an adjective before another adjective when they should be using an adverb in standard written English. Nonstandard I am real sleepy today. Standard I am really sleepy today. “Sleepy” acts as an adjective describing the subject “I,” connected by the state-ofbeing verb “am.” “Really” is an adverb intensifying the adjective “sleepy.” The adjective real means “genuine.” The adverb really is an intensifier. Real will describe a noun, but it will not describe any other part of speech. Really will describe an adjective, an adverb, or a verb, but it will not describe a noun. It answers the question to what extent. In these sentences, the word real describes nouns. Standard Baseballs are made of real leather—of genuine leather. Standard I have a flute made of real oak. Standard She thanked him with real sincerity. The adverb really is an intensifier used to describe adjectives in the following sentences. Standard I am really sick. Standard She did not think he was really sincere. Standard He thought she was really kind. The adverb really can also be used to describe verbs. Standard She really went to the store. Standard He really climbed Mount Everest. The adverb really also describes adverbs. Standard He snipped the wires really carefully. Standard Please shovel the driveway really thoroughly. |