Get Free Checker

How To Use Adverbially In A Sentence

  • But it's a prepositional phrase used adverbially, modifying ‘said’.
  • the prepositional phrase here is used adverbially
  • Laxly e mail lists at nosohusial sphaerocarpos to relishing no striver in advancing intervention, a unmitigable litchee, they are so susceptible adverbially heterospory christless the old pyrogallic way. Rational Review
  • Wherefore the word X+S+D+, following may be taken adverbially, as a lenitive of that severity which this word importeth: "Let him smite me;" but The Sermons of John Owen
  • The key word was sorry, later adverbially emphasized as very sorry. The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • All I can do is describe how Guinness affects me neurologically, intellectually, spiritually, sexually, violently, adverbially — every year a new edition comes out. Walter Kirn Mourns : Edward Champion’s Reluctant Habits
  • Laxly e mail lists at nosohusial sphaerocarpos to relishing no striver in advancing intervention, a unmitigable litchee, they are so susceptible adverbially heterospory christless the old pyrogallic way. Rational Review
  • Equally evidently, from any such adverbially qualified sentence we can validly infer a sentence from which one or more of the adverbial qualifiers has been detached.
  • And because good has taken on this colloquial resonance when used adverbially, it has made some people sensitive about its use. On looking well
  • The Loop at the end of this affix denotes the word is to be used adverbially; so that the sense of it must be the same which we express by the phrase, For Ever and Ever.
  • Not: He was absent due to illness, which uses due to adverbially. Essential Guide to Business Style and Usage
  • Given this account of the intentionality of perception, sensations are best understood adverbially, that is, as a way of perceiving objects in the world. Malebranche's Theory of Ideas and Vision in God
  • According to the dictionary, abaft can be used adverbially (in the stern half of the ship) or prepositionally (nearer the stern than; aft of).
  • This would certainly be valid grammatically, if the verbal sense were correct, but it remains difficult to give a good sense to the clause if the expression ‘like a cedar’ must be tied adverbially to the verb.
  • In sensibility the qualities of perceived things turn into time and into consciousness ¦ [But,] do not the sensations in which the sensible qualities are lived resound adverbially ¦ as adverbs of the verb to be? Emmanuel Levinas

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):