GIVE ANSWERS - English

100% GOOD (1 votes)AnsweredLanguage Question
It is adverb or adjective

In this sentence below lately is an adjective or an adverb?

+ It has rained a lot lately

-  It has not a lot lately

? Has it rained a lot lately

That is adjective or advent.

And how to know that is adjective or adverb?

Thank you

 

 


PS: Immerse yourself in these free English lessons: Module: Possible Positions of Adverbs of Time in a SentenceDiminutivesFuture TenseHow to Pronounce H

GIVE ANSWERS

HyaSky profile picture HyaSkyOctober 2019

Adverbs almost always end in "-ly". 

ErnestoAlonzo profile picture ErnestoAlonzoOctober 2019
as you see friend, here is not a noun to use a adjective. generally the adverbs finish with "ly"
kind regards
Stefania90 profile picture Stefania90October 2019
Lately is an adverb. An adverb serves as a modifier of a verb, an adjective, another adverb, a preposition, a phrase, a clause, or a sentence, expressing some relation of manner or quality, place, time, degree, number, cause, opposition, affirmation, or denial. Whereas adjectives are words that describe the qualities of nouns.