ADVERBS CLASSIFIED ACCORDING TO USE.
Simple.
285. All adverbs which have
no function in the sentence except to modify are called simple adverbs.
Such are most of those given already in Sec. 282.
Interrogative.
286. Some adverbs, besides
modifying, have the additional function of asking a question.
These may introduce direct questions of—
(1) Time.
When did this humane custom begin?—H. Clay.
(2) Place.
Where will you have the scene?—Longfellow
(3) Manner.
And how looks it now?—Hawthorne.
(4) Degree.
"How long have you had this whip?" asked he.—Bulwer.
(5) Reason.
Why that wild stare and wilder cry?—Whittier
Now wherefore stopp'st thou me?—Coleridge
Indirect questions.
Or they may introduce indirect questions of—
(1) Time.
I do not remember when I was taught to
read.—D. Webster.
(2) Place.
I will not ask where thou liest low.—Byron
(3) Manner.
Who set you to cast about what you should say to the
select souls, or how to say anything to such?—Emerson.
(4) Degree.
Being too full of sleep to
understand How far the unknown transcends the what we
know. —Longfellow
(5) Reason.
I hearkened, I know not why.—Poe.
287. There is a class of
words usually classed as conjunctive adverbs, as they are said to have
the office of conjunctions in joining clauses, while
having the office of adverbs in modifying;
for example,—
When last I saw thy young blue eyes, they
smiled.—Byron.
But in reality, when does not express time and
modify, but the whole clause, when...eyes; and when has
simply the use of a conjunction, not an adverb. |