Use and placement of adjectives
Adverbs are generally placed after the verbs they modify:
- Elle parle rapidement. (She speaks quickly.)
- Il a conduit lentement. (He drove slowly.)
In the passé composé, small, common adverbs ( bien, mal, souvent, toujours, déjà, and encore) precede the past participle:
- Il a bien parlé. (He spoke well.)
- J'ai déjà lu ce livre. (I already read that book.)
Longer adverbs may be placed at the beginning of the sentence:
- D'habitude nous mangeons tard. (Generally, we eat late.)
Note that a few adjectives (in the masculine singular form) are used adverbially in common expressions:
- aller droit (to go straight ahead)
- coûter cher (to cost a lot)
- parler bas (to speak in a low voice)
- parler fort/haut (to speak in a loud voice)
- payer cher (to cost a lot)
- s'arrêter net (to stop short)
- travailler dur (to work hard)
Adverbial expressions may be formed by combining the following:
preposition + noun
- à la fois (at the same time)
- à merveille (marvelously)
- à peine (hardly, scarcely)
preposition + adjective (+ noun)
- de bon appétit (with a hearty appetite)
- par conséquent (consequently)
preposition + adverb
preposition + several words
- et ainsi de suite (and so on and so forth)
- tant mieux (so much the better)
- tout à ( d'un) coup (suddenly)
- tout de même (just the same)
- tout de suite (immediately)
Adverbs expressing quantity are followed by the preposition de (without any other article):
- autant de (as much, many)
- combien de (how much, how many)
- tant de (so much, so many)
- trop de (too much, too many)
Irregular adverbs
Note the following irregular adverbs:
and