Adjectives VS. MANNER ADVERBS BRYAN LOPEZ
adjectives Adjectives describe how somebody or something looks, tastes, sounds, etc.. They describe nouns. You have a beautiful car
adjectives Adjectives describe nouns Pablo looks tired.
adjectives Some adjectives look like verbs. Many English adjectives end in ing or ed. Confusing, amazing, exciting ,tiring and boring. Confused, amazed, excited, tired and bored.
adjectives Also, we can use adjectives after the following verbs: be become / get look sound + adjective taste smell feel
adjectives It is sunny today. I am getting tired.
adverbs We use adverbs mainly to describe how somebody does something or how something happens. This means we use adverbs mainly to describe verbs: She sings beautifully. (beautifully describes "sings")
adverbs To make an adverb, we usually add ly to the adjective: beautifully badly quietly carefully sadly He speaks English badly.
adverbs Adjectives that end in y usually change to ily in the adverb form: angry ➝ angrily happy ➝ happily heavy ➝ heavily noisy ➝ noisily
adverbs There are also a few irregular adverbs in English. For fast, late, and hard, the adjective and adverb forms are the same. The adverb form of good is well: Adjective Adverb fast late hard good fast late hard well
reference Jim Clark, 2017, http://www.smrtenglish.com/espe/lesson/9 656