sentence adverb การใช้
- Finally ( sentence adverbs are excellent graphing spots ), there is the
- The CBS line has no comma after the sentence adverb
- :Do you have reliable sources that classify " not " as a sentence adverb?
- Disjuncts ( also called sentence adverbs ) are useful in colloquial speech for the concision they permit.
- :: There are still pedants who object to the use of all or most " sentence adverbs ".
- No, you don't need a comma after the sentence adverb recently; that comma is considered optional.
- Hopefully, for the multitudes who accept it as a sentence adverb, leads a similarly two-faced life.
- "Unfortunately ", however, is only one of many sentence adverbs that can modify a speaker's attitude.
- The latter is not to be used as a sentence adverb, they state; it must refer to the subject of the sentence.
- Good grammar is not always good style; I would use also as a sentence adverb only if I wanted to give the impression of an afterthought.
- :: : : Unfortunately, sentence adverbs seem to be widely accepted, but, hopefully, they are not extensively used in Wikipedia articles ."
- Thus, in The New York Times's sentence adverb, " Most famously, " the meaning is " in what everyone knows him for ."
- An example of a sentence adverb modifying a sentence is : " Unfortunately, when I got to the supermarket it had run out of the vegetable I like ."
- Only yesterday, the adverb clearly ( akin to the noun transparency ) held sway as the sentence adverb of choice, meaning " as any fool can plainly see ."
- "Even though there are plenty of sentence adverbs, like frankly, " he said, " for some reason people grabbed onto hopefully and wouldn't accept it.
- You don't have like what you learn : Nobody will force you to use " hopefully " as a sentence adverb, any more than you have to get your nose pierced.
- In Happily, the tornado missed us, we've got a sentence adverb, modifying the whole idea; in We emerged happily from the storm cellar it's a garden-variety adverb modifying emerged.
- An example of a sentence adverb modifying a clause within a sentence is : " I liked the red car in the forecourt, but unfortunately, when I got to the dealer it was already sold ."
- Elsewhere, for example in his comments on " black English, " on " chair, chairperson, " on " split infinitive " and on " hopefully " as a " sentence adverb, " his tolerance of change seems both reasoned and admirable.
- But since I assume Smyth didn't invent the notion on his own, I wanted to make sure that the article's confident assertion that " sentence adverbs " are completely contained within the notion presented ( certainly, maybe, etc . ) seems correct to editors more interested & expert in linguistics.
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