![]() An example of a sentence adverb modifying a clause within a sentence is: I liked the red car in the forecourt but, unfortunately, when I got to the dealer it was already sold. Adjunct meaning: They worked with seriousness.Īn example of a sentence adverb modifying a sentence is: Unfortunately, when I got to the supermarket it had run out of the vegetable I like. Disjunct meaning: I'm serious when I say that they worked in an underground diamond mine. They seriously worked in an underground diamond mine run by Barbara. Sometimes, the same word or phrase can be interpreted either as a disjunct or as a simple adjunct: ![]() Unfortunately, by the time she reached the bus stop, the bus had already left.Clearly, the mail did not come today due to it being a national holiday.Luckily, the amount of sugar the recipe called for was in stock in the pantry.Interestingly, the comment made for a great topic of its own.Frankly, this whole paragraph needs work.Fortunately for you, I have it right here.(Meaning "I'm honest when I say I didn't do it" rather than "I didn't do it in an honest way.") Here are some examples (note: the disjuncts that follow are 'sentence adverbs'): Such elements usually appear peripherally (at the beginning or end of the sentence) and are set off from the rest of the sentence by a comma (in writing) and a pause (in speech). More generally, the term disjunct can be used to refer to any sentence element that is not fully integrated into the clausal structure of the sentence. ![]() ![]() In linguistics, a disjunct is a type of adverbial adjunct that expresses information that is not considered essential to the sentence it appears in, but which is considered to be the speaker's or writer's attitude towards, or descriptive statement of, the propositional content of the sentence, "expressing, for example, the speaker's degree of truthfulness or his manner of speaking." Ī specific type of disjunct is the sentence adverb (or sentence adverbial), which modifies a sentence, or a clause within a sentence, to convey the mood, attitude or sentiments of the speaker, rather than an adverb modifying a verb, an adjective or another adverb within a sentence. For the linguistic and logical operation of disjunction, see Disjunction. ![]()
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