0
BoSsSy Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Is there difference in meaning when the adverb is in different place?

Is there difference in meaning when the adverb is in different place?

For example:

I constantly try to improve my English.

Constantly, I try to improve my English.

I try to improve my English constantly.


The meaning is the same in all of the sentences showed above? right?

  

Top answer

"constantly" doesn't work well as a sentential adverb, so I'd forget about the middle example and stick with the first and the last. There is no difference in meaning. All three are the same in meaning.

  • "constantly" doesn't work well as a sentential adverb, so I'd forget about the middle example and stick with the first and the last.
  • There is no difference in meaning.
  • All three are the same in meaning.
  • CJ
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

"constantly" doesn't work well as a sentential adverb, so I'd forget about the middle example and stick with the first and the last.

There is no difference in meaning. All three are the same in meaning.

CJ

Related Questions