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No man alive could have done it.
No one aware of the consequences of his deed would have defied the fate.
When used as detached attributes, statives may be either post- or premodifying:
The microphone, already alive, was waiting for him.
He stood, alert and listening, while the noise from the reef grew steadily around him.
Aloof on her mountain-top, she considered the innumerable activities of men.
In all these cases the stative retains its predicational force.
THE ADVERB
§ 238. The adverb is a word denoting circumstances or characteristics which attend or modify an action,
state, or quality. It may also intensify a quality or characteristics.
From this definition it is difficult to define adverbs as a class, because they comprise a most heterogeneous
group of words, and there is considerable overlap between the class and other word classes. They have many
kinds of form, meaning and function. Alongside such undoubtful adverbs as here, now, often, seldom, always,
there are many others which also function as words of other classes. Thus, adverbs like dead (dead tired), clear
(to get clear away), clean (I've clean forgotten), slow, easy (he would say that slow and easy) coincide with
corresponding adjectives (a dead body, clear waters, clean hands). Adverbs like past, above are homonymous
with prepositions. There is also a special group of pronominal adverbs when, where, how, why used either as
interrogative words or as connectives to introduce subordinate clauses.
Where shall we go? (an interrogative pronominal adverb)
Well go where you want (a conjunctive pronominal adverb).
Some adverbs may be used rather like a verb, as in Up. Jenkins! Down, Peter!, where the first word is like
an imperative.
In many cases the border-line between adverbs and words of the other classes is defined syntactically.
He walked past. (adverb)
He walked past the house. (preposition)
They took the dog in. (adverb)
They left the dog in the house, (preposition)
He did everything slowly but surely. (adverb)
Surely you know him. (modal word)
There are three adverbs connected with numerals: once, twice, and thrice (the latter being archaic). They
denote measure or frequency.
She went there once a week.
I saw him twice last month.
Twice is also used in the structure twice as long, etc.
He is twice as tall as his brother.
She is twice as clever.
Beginning with three the idea of frequency or repetition is expressed by the phrases three times, four times;
He went there four times; he is four times as bigger; she is ten times cleverer.
Morphological composition
§ 239. Adverbs vary in their structure. There are simple, derived, compound, and composite adverbs.
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