Adverbs of time
Afterwards, eventually, lately, now, recently, soon, then, today, tomorrow, yesterday, last year, next year,
etc.
At once, since then, till.
Adverbs of time usually come at the very beginning or at the very end of the clause.
-
Eventually I gave up.
-
I gave up eventually.
-
I gave up eventually. I was fed up with it.
And position is usual with imperatives and phrases with “till”.
-
Write today.
-
I’ll wait till night.
With compound tenses afterwards, eventually, today, now, recently, soon can come after the auxiliary verb.
-
We will soon be there.
Before, immediately, early and late come at the end of the clause.
-
I’ll go there immediately.
-
I came late.
But when before, immediately are used as conjunction they are placed at the beginning of the clause.
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I’ve seen him before. Adverb
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Before you eat, clean your hands. Conjunction
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