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Some adverbs and adverb phrases are used parenthetically (like an aside) to clarify or comment. e.g. "I have always hated to commute and so, consequently, I considered working from home."
Adverb phrases modify the verb, adjective, or adverb of the sentence.
Three is not an adverb. In a sentence it is a noun or an adjective.
hence, thus, therefore, consequently
The adverb of acceptance is acceptably.An example sentence is: "this works quite acceptably".
Some adverbs and adverb phrases are used parenthetically (like an aside) to clarify or comment. e.g. "I have always hated to commute and so, consequently, I considered working from home."
The science teacher alerted the students, then, continued to demostrate the experiment.
"Consequently" is a conjunctive adverb.
A sentence wouldn't be an adverb. A sentence is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb and forms a complete thought. It may or may not contain an adverb (a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb).
If it does not contain a verb, it is not a complete sentence. It is a fragment.
i think yes it is but I'm not sure but I'm really thinking it is please go to Google and say: what is the adverb in this sentence the cat is stretching I REALLY HOPE THIS HELPED! =D
The adverb form for the adjective consequent is consequently.
Head&tail commas To avoid comma-confusion, set off the parenthetical with either (1) dashes or (2) parentheses as a function of emphasis intended; within the parenthetical, punctuate the conjunctive adverb as called for by expression- structure.
Yeah cause it has an "ly" but it depends if theres a verb in the sentence you're reading.
Correctly is the adverb in that sentence.
That sentence does not have an adverb.
Steven's first novel was a best seller; consequently, he has been on the talk show circuit.This sentence contains two independent clauses. To avoid a run-on sentence or a comma splice, this example uses a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb ("consequently") to separate the independent clauses.