54 examples of adverbial in sentences

The Cree has not, I believe, the double negative nor the adverbial and plaintive forms of verbs, as I have termed them.

Again: late, later, latest, is commonly contrasted in both senses, with early, earlier, earliest; but if lately, latelier, lateliest, were adopted in the adverbial contrast, early and late, earlier and later, earliest and latest, might be contrasted as adjectives only.

And besides, according to his own practice, he ought to have preferred plainliest to plainest, in the adverbial sense of most plainly.

But, however custom may sanction the adverbial construction of the foregoing simple terms, the distinctive form of the adverb is in general to be preferred, especially in prose.

But, in phrases of an adverbial character, what is elsewhere a preposition often becomes an adverb.

From these, each sentence must have two elements; the Subject, or Substantive element, and the Predicate, or Predicative element, which are principal; and a sentence may have five, the subordinates being the Adjective element, the Objective element, and the Adverbial element.

These expressions are taken by some as having a direct adverbial relation to the terms which they qualify; but they are perhaps most commonly explained as being dependent on some preposition understood.

The only construction which makes it any thing else, is that which puts it after a verb or a participle, in the sense of an adverbial supplement; as, "The infernal idol is bowed down to."Herald of Freedom.

"There are three kinds of comparison, namely: regular, irregular, and adverbial.

As an adverbial noun:

See also Appendix 85 for adjective and adverbial uses.

Adverbial clauses: [Go where duty calls].

Phrasal Adverbs.+Certain phrases, adverbial in character, cannot easily be separated into parts.

3. The adjective, and not the adverbial, form should be used after a copulative verb, since adverbs cannot modify substantives:

This phrase is adjective in force when it modifies a substantive; and adverbial, when it modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb:

Many of them are still used adverbially or as adverbial suffixes:

It, therefore, stands in adverbial relation to the verb "went.

Modifying clauses show adjective and adverbial constructions.

4. Adverbial phrase:

Adverbial clause: [Go when you can].

Occasionally, adverbs and phrases of adverbial character modify the entire thought in a sentence, rather than some single word: [To speak plainly, I cannot go.

" ahuiaca, an adverbial form, usually means "pleasant-smelling," though in derivation it is from the verb ahuia, to be satisfied with.

A doubly adverbial form, like "illy.

In the adverbial form the word is properly used in the sentence following: John and James are bright and dull, respectively.

In the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries is was not customary to consider the adverbial tout as necessarily invariable.

54 examples of  adverbial  in sentences