About Adverb and adverb phrase please...
Answers
✔️Adverb phrase:
An adjective phrase, or an adjectival phrase, is more than a group of words with an adjective in it. It's actually a group of words that describe a noun or pronoun in a sentence, thus functioning as an adjective.
An adjective phrase can be formed out of an intensifier and an adjective. An example :
➡️The 'dazzlingly' beautiful woman walked down the street.
➡️Monica is a 'sweet, intelligent, beautiful' girl,"
we see an adjectival phrase that paints a much more in-depth picture of Monica.
✔️ADVERB: it describes verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs; tells how, why, when, where, to what extent.
Example :
➡️He was just leaving(just)
➡️She has almost finished(finished)
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An adverb is a word that is used to change, modify or qualify several types of words including an adjective, a verb, a clause, another adverb, or any other type of word or phrase, with the exception of determiners and adjectives, that directly modify nouns. A good way to understand adverbs is to think about them as the words that provide context. Specifically, adverbs provide a description of how, where, when, in what manner and to what extent something is done or happens. Normally, we can spot an adverb by the fact that it often ends in –ly, but there are lots of adverbs that don’t end in this way. Moreover, adverbs can be used in many combinations with each other
AN ADVERB PHRASE IS A GROUP OF WORDS THAT FUNCTIONS AS AN ADVERB IS A SENTENCE. ADVERB PHRASES ANSWERS THE QUESTIONS HOW, WHERE, WHEN