Grammar

What is a fronted adverbial and how to we use them?

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5 Responses to Grammar

  1. Aika says:

    Fronted adverbials adds to the beginning of the sentence and adds when, where and how something takes place.

  2. Iasna says:

    An adverbial is -as the name suggests- a word that describes a verb and answers the questions when, how and where. A fronted adverbial is an adverb put at the front of a sentence to increase it’s importance.

  3. Iasna says:

    A fronted adverbial PHRASE is a phrase answering the questions where, when and how, and this phrase is at the beginning of a sentence too. (Fronted adverbials and fronted adverbial phrases are often separated from the rest of the sentence by a comma. E.g; Earlier that day, Luke was told that the swimming pool was closed. or Fortunately, his mum said he could play football instead.)

  4. Jude says:

    A fronted adverbial is an adverb or adverbial phrase at the start of a sentence.
    E.G. Suddenly, the… Out of nowhere, the…

  5. Athisayan and Alistair says:

    WE use fronted adverbials to tell the reader: where something has happened, how it happened and finnaly when it happened.

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