0
Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Adverbs

Taking the definition of an adverb, I struggle why some words (such as 'therefore' and, to a lesser extent 'still' and 'perhaps') count as adverbs. Help would be appreciated. I'm taking the definition of grammar as:

'a word or phrase that modifies the meaning of an adjective, verb, or other adverb, expressing manner, place, time, or degree (e.g. gently, here, now, very ). Some adverbs, for example sentence adverbs, can also be used to modify whole sentences'.
  

Top answer

The word therefore is a special kind of adverb called a conjunctive adverb or adverbial conjunction. These conjunctions show a relationship between two sentences and are used for a flow of ideas in writing or speech. Others adverbial conjunctions are: However, moreover, consequently, in addition, and for example.

  • The word therefore is a special kind of adverb called a conjunctive adverb or adverbial conjunction.
  • These conjunctions show a relationship between two sentences and are used for a flow of ideas in writing or speech.
  • Others adverbial conjunctions are: However, moreover, consequently, in addition, and for example.
  • htm#transitions
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
The word therefore is a special kind of adverb called a conjunctive adverb or adverbial conjunction. These conjunctions show a relationship between two sentences and are used for a flow of ideas in writing or speech.
Others adverbial conjunctions are: However, moreover, consequently, in addition, and for example.
Here is a good reference:

Related Questions