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#46 |
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But it’s not - that’s the point. The word “bad” in “I feel bad” is filling the same function as the word “dinner” in “I eat dinner”. It’s saying what you are feeling, not how you are feeling it. It is not an adverb in any way, shape or form.
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#47 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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HarryT and sjfan are right. 'Bad' in "I feel bad" is not an adverb because it is not modifying the verb.
I feel sad. I feel happy. I feel sick. I feel well. None of those are adverbs either. |
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#48 |
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That Stephen King statement: 'The road to hell is paved with adverbs':
Isn't he thinking of people who qualify 'said' with an adverb? He said mysteriously She said darkly |
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#49 |
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#50 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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Quote:
And that is really the point: does it have it be there? When it comes to adverbs (and even suspected adverbs) that is all you have to know/ask. Often there are better, clearer ways to say the same thing; or ways to show rather than tell. And often you already have made it clear, so the adverb is redundant. ... And sometimes you want the adverb, despite the thousands of versions of advice telling you otherwise. Even King admits to using them, and he admits to using verbs other than "said" (eg: pleaded and shouted) but insists that adverbs in speech attribution should be kept to "the rarest most special occasions" (but he still doesn't say "never"). |
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#51 | |
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Quote:
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#52 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Because they can easily be overused. Some writers like to carefully qualify every verb they deliberately write. Because they want to convey precisely the meaning they really intend, and incorrectly think that adverbs are the best way to casually do that.
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#53 |
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Surely, though, the same "abuse" could apply to adjectives, could it not?
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#54 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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Quote:
![]() An earlier example on this thread was "ran quickly" - since "ran" already indicates speed, does "quickly" add anything to the phrase? It is not that such constructs should never be used, but that they should be used deliberately, and not just because you aren't sure if the reader has understood. It is not uncommon to find something like: "Shut up!" he shouted loudly. Here we have italics, exclamation mark, and an adverb to the speech attribution, and they are all saying the same thing: give this emphasis. The italics can go, but I'd probably keep the exclamation point - especially if I can drop the speech attribution all together (obviously that depends on the greater context). The point being that the "he shouted" maybe redundant too, given the words and exclamation. And you're right, adverbs are not the only thing that can be overused, but... * abuse has been common * King (and some other famous people) have highlighted the abuse so naturally every writer's advice column out there likes to harp on adverbs. |
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#55 |
Wizard
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As you pointed out, it depends on context. If the door was known to be balky at closing, or if the character was hesitant about closing the door, but wanted to be decisive, then the adverb is fine. (now I can say it's an adverb, whereas before I just knew it was the word that went there.-)
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#56 |
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How can there be a thread on adverbs without anyone mentioning Tom Swifties?
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#57 | |
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#58 |
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Precisely. Compare with "he ran bad" where, although horribly ungrammatical, "bad" is modifying the verb and hence is an adverb.
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#59 | ||
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Quote:
Present continuous active verbs are often used for description – to describe ongoing background action. From the DejaVu screenplay ... Quote:
As for adverbs ... how else would you write, "Joe slowly backs away?" There's also the matter of pacing. If the whole story (or script) is written in simple present tense, you'll get shorter ("punchier") sentences throughout. And then, when the pace and action picks up (where sentences naturally become shorter), it won't stand out from the rest of the writing. (Sorry to ramble.) |
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#60 |
cacoethes scribendi
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No problem at all. I quite agree about the tendency of advice columns to get carried away with their "don't do this" rules. Writing is all about the getting the balance right, and the balance keeps changing. It's one of the things that makes it interesting.
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