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Adverbial

In grammar, an adverbial (abbreviated .mw-parser-output .smallcaps{font-variant:small-caps}adv) is a word (an adverb) or a group of words (an adverbial phrase or an adverbial clause) that modifies or more closely defines the sentence or the verb. (The word adverbial itself is also used as an adjective, meaning 'having the same function as an adverb'.) Look at the examples below: In grammar, an adverbial (abbreviated .mw-parser-output .smallcaps{font-variant:small-caps}adv) is a word (an adverb) or a group of words (an adverbial phrase or an adverbial clause) that modifies or more closely defines the sentence or the verb. (The word adverbial itself is also used as an adjective, meaning 'having the same function as an adverb'.) Look at the examples below: In English, adverbials most commonly take the form of adverbs, adverb phrases, temporal noun phrases or prepositional phrases. Many types of adverbials (for instance: reason and condition) are often expressed by clauses. An adverbial is a construction which modifies or describes verbs. When an adverbial modifies a verb, it changes the meaning of that verb. Word groups, which are also considered to be adverbials, can also modify verbs: for example, a prepositional phrase, a noun phrase, a finite clause or a non-finite clause. Prepositional phrase in a sentence may be adverbial; that is, it modifies a verb.

[ "Syntax", "Linguistics", "Artificial intelligence", "Natural language processing", "Adverbial case", "English prefix", "Adverbial clause", "Absolute construction", "Adverbial complement" ]
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