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In English, the component of a noun is a definite, while the component of an adjective, adverb, verb and the whole sentence is an adverbial.
eg .the boy [ in the school uniform prepositional phrase modification boy , is my little brother
the boy came into the classroom [with a book in his hand prepositional phrase modifying verb came into the classroom , is an adverbial. 】
The boy [ sitting at the table participle phrase, modifying boy , as a definite expression] is lovely
the boy stood there , waiting for a bus participle phrase, modified stood , as an accompanying adverbial. 】
people [ here adverb, modify noun, as a definite ] are friendly
They came [ here adverb modifier verb came, as place adverbial ] to see me
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To put it simply, an adverbial is a modification of an action, an adjective, or a sentence. As for the definite, it is to modify nouns, pronouns, etc.
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The definite is generally a word that precedes a noun, such as a good, a bad, and a word that ends in a noun.
The adverbial is generally the time, place, reason, and a companion adverbial.
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1. Look at the grammatical properties of modifiers.
1) A modifier filled by a distinguishing word or a noun is a definite term.
2) The modifier filled by an adverb is an adverbial.
However, the modifiers filled by adjectives and state words can be either adjectives (serious attitude) and adverbial (serious study). Therefore, the adjective and the adverbial cannot be fully determined based on the grammatical nature of the modifier.
2. Look at the grammatical properties of the central language.
1) The central language is the body of speech, and the modifier is the definite.
2) The central language is a predicate component, and the modifier is an adverbial.
3. Location. There are generally two kinds of positions of the definite: those used before the modified word are called prepositional predicates, and those used after the modified words are called postpositional predicates.
The position of the adverbial is generally placed at the end of the sentence, but it can also be placed at the beginning of the sentence or in the middle of the sentence.
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1. Object. There is no need to hesitate, it is the object of the action of a sentence, which is a noun class. For example: I teach you. "You" is the object.
2. Definite. This is the same as an adverbial, which indicates a modifier or state phrase that determines the subject or object, such as state, position, etc. If the explanation is not clear.
The simplest, most certain, and completely accurate way to do this is to say that the modifiers in front of the white spoon "of" are all definite words. You don't have to worry about it.
Such as: beautiful flowers are very fragrant. "Beautiful" is the final word, and this is absolutely true without thinking about anything.
3. Adverbials. Like the definite, it indicates a state. There are only 3 cases: The preceding sentence in a compound sentence indicates a modified or definite state. A phrase or sentence in a single sentence. In the middle of a sentence, this is rarely used.
There is also a simple way = = soil also" in front of the adverbial. Figurative words such as like, general, etc., are all adverbials. Such as: Running like the wind. "Like the wind" is the adverbial.
It has nothing to do with the subject in the compound sentence, and the sentence that starts and starts (basically before the comma) is an adverbial. For example: the sky is so blue, we went on an outing. The subject is "we", and "the sky is really blue" is really an adverbial.
3. Complements. The first thing to know about this is to know the particle, but there are very few in modern Chinese. It mainly indicates what the subject wants to do and do.
You remember that modal words such as "has", "ah", "oh", and "la" are complements, and there is nothing wrong with this. It is generally located after the object, and if there is no object, it is after the predicate. It doesn't make sense in this sentence, it's an auxiliary role. You can read it if you remove it, but it's just not smooth.
The Master of Modern Chinese is hand-typed and points are given.
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A definite is an adjective that generally modifies a noun before a noun such as beautiful great There are many classifications of adverbials, the most common being the time adverbial and the place adverbial have the same role as modifying the verb.
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Difference Between Adjective and Adverbial:
1. The nature is different.
Determinative: Determinant is used to modify, define, and explain the qualities and characteristics of a noun or pronoun.
Adverbial: Adverbial (referred to as adverbial) is an important modifier of the sentence, and it is another additional component in the predicate, which modifies and restricts the predicate center word from the aspects of situation, time, place, manner, condition, object, affirmation, negation, scope and degree.
2. The content is different.
Determinative: There are mainly adjectives, in addition to nouns, pronouns, numbers, prepositional phrases, verb infinitives (phrases), participles, definite clauses, or words, phrases, or sentences equivalent to adjectives.
Adverbial: "Adverbial" has different roles in different languages, and Chinese adverbial is a joint component in front of a verb or adjective, which is used to modify and limit the verb or adjective, indicating the state, manner, time, place or degree of action; English adverbials modify verbs, adjectives, adverbs, or entire sentences; German adverbials modify verbs, adjectives, adverbs, or entire sentences.
3. The location is different.
Definite: '??' is commonly used in Chinese'of' means that there are generally two kinds of positions of the definite: the predicate used before the modified word is called the prepositional preposition, and the one used after the modified word is called the postpositional preposition, and the relationship between the definite and the central language is the relationship between the modifier and the modified, the restricted and the restricted.
Adverbial: The general adverbial is located between the subject and the predicate, and plays the role of modifying and limiting the central word of the predicate; Adverbial sentences at the beginning of a sentence are relatively rare, but when using nouns and prepositions that indicate time, place, and purpose as adverbials, you can put the adverbial in front of the subject.
1. The meaning of the subject:
The subject is "the sender of the action" (subject-verb-object). >>>More
1. The meaning of the subject:
The subject is "the sender of the action" (subject-verb-object). >>>More
The predicate is used after the be or the verb to modify the subject; A predicate is a phrase formed by a verb that expresses the state or action of the subject; The definite sentence is to modify and explain before and after the noun component; adverbial table time, place, cause, concession, etc.; A definite clause is one or more sentences that act as a definite.
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First, the predicate. Formally, the predicate is located after the pronoun. A predicate is a sentence component that plays an expressive role. It modifies the subject. >>>More