Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Adverbs


Adverbs get no respect. 

In case you've forgotten your English grammar, an adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Adverbs usually tell us when, where, or how an action is performed. (Are you asleep yet?)

Often adverbs are "ly" words: 


  • She ran slowly.
  • He quickly ate his lunch. 
  • She really liked him. 
  • He traveled adventurously


But not always: 


  • She drove fast.
  • He never ate breakfast.
  • The leaves were quite red.
  • I almost traveled to Japan.


So why don't adverbs get respect? Because many people think we writers overuse them.

Look at the some of the sentences above. Could we use a more vivid verb instead of an adverb? Are we being lazy writers?


  • She raced. (Instead of drove quickly.)
  • He wolfed his lunch. (Instead of quickly ate.)
  • He skipped breakfast. (Instead of never ate.)
  • The leaves exploded with red. (Instead of were quite red.)


Not an adverb in sight, and we used strong verbs: raced, wolfed, skipped, exploded. 

Try this at home: go through a story you're writing and highlight every adverb. Then see if you can replace the verb and adverb ("drove quickly") with a strong and vivid verb ("raced"). 

Of course, we don't want to cut every adverb. We really, really, really don't want to do that!