adverbial
adverbial
Definition
ad·ver·bial (ad vʉr′bē əl, əd-)
adjective
- of an adverb
- having the nature or function of an adverb
- used to form an adverb an adverbial suffix
noun
Linguis. a word or word group that occurs in grammatical functions typical of adverbs (Ex.: the man ate lobster with delight; the man ordered lobster when he had money)
adverbial
Usage Examples
Noun used with modifier
- place: Jacobs' assessment of the place adverbial in ( 42 ), however, has to be rejected.
Modifies a noun
- adjunct: The cleft sentence is one way that English can emphasize an adverbial adjunct.
- clause: However, an adverbial clause which contains another clause is called a complex clause.
- phrase: Were James's readers to interpret his use of this adverbial phrase to mean 2000 years?
- particle: Up to in some contexts is a sequence of adverbial particle - preposition.
- theory: First, some version of perceptual subjectivism is probably correct, with the adverbial theory being the more promising of the two main alternatives.
- form: There are however a number of adverbs which are only ( or primarily ) used in the adverbial form.
Preposition: in
- function: I shall therefore concern myself entirely with its predicates, which must, in the nature of the case, be adverbial in function.
Browse dictionary entries near adverbial
- adverb
- adventurousness
- adventurously
- adventurous
- adventuristic
- adventurist
- adventurism
- adventuring
- adventuress
- adventuresome
