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B1 Spanish GrammarAdverbs & Adverb Position

Master Spanish adverbs for manner, time, place, frequency, and degree. Learn to form adverbs from adjectives using -mente and understand the flexible but rule-governed position of adverbs in Spanish sentences. Discover alternatives to long -mente adverbs.

1Forming Adverbs with -mente

Form adverbs from adjectives by adding -mente to the feminine singular form: rápida→rápidamente, lenta→lentamente. If the adjective ends in -e or a consonant, just add -mente: fácil→fácilmente, frecuente→frecuentemente. The adjective keeps its accent mark.

Adverb Formation with -mente

AdjectiveFeminineAdverb
rápidorápidarápidamente
lentolentalentamente
perfectoperfectaperfectamente
fácilfácilfácilmente
frecuentefrecuentefrecuentemente
felizfelizfelizmente

Examples

Habla español perfectamente.

She speaks Spanish perfectly.

-mente from perfecta

El tren llegĂł lentamente.

The train arrived slowly.

-mente from lenta

Fácilmente puedo hacerlo.

I can easily do it.

-mente from fácil

Normalmente desayuno a las ocho.

I normally have breakfast at eight.

-mente from normal

2Common Adverbs by Type

Spanish has many common adverbs that don't use -mente. Time: ahora, hoy, ayer, mañana, siempre, nunca, ya, todavía. Place: aquí, allí, cerca, lejos, arriba, abajo. Manner: bien, mal, así, despacio, rápido. Degree: muy, bastante, demasiado, poco, mucho.

Common Non -mente Adverbs

CategorySpanishEnglish
Timesiempre, nunca, ya, todavĂ­aalways, never, already, still
PlaceaquĂ­, allĂ­, cerca, lejoshere, there, near, far
Mannerbien, mal, despaciowell, badly, slowly
Degreemuy, bastante, demasiadovery, quite, too much
Frequencya veces, a menudosometimes, often

Examples

Siempre llega tarde.

He always arrives late.

frequency adverb

Vive muy cerca de aquĂ­.

She lives very close to here.

degree + place adverbs

TodavĂ­a no he terminado.

I still haven't finished.

todavĂ­a = still/yet

Come demasiado rápido.

He eats too fast.

degree + manner

3Adverb Position

Adverb position is flexible but has tendencies. Manner adverbs usually follow the verb. Time and place adverbs often come at the start or end of the sentence. Frequency adverbs typically precede the main verb. Degree adverbs come before what they modify.

Adverb Position Guidelines

Adverb TypeTypical PositionExample
Mannerafter verbCanta bien
Timestart or endHoy voy al cine / Voy al cine hoy
Frequencybefore verbSiempre llego temprano
Degreebefore modified wordMuy cansado, bastante difĂ­cil

Examples

Trabaja eficientemente.

She works efficiently.

manner after verb

Mañana tenemos examen.

Tomorrow we have an exam.

time at start for emphasis

Nunca he estado en JapĂłn.

I have never been to Japan.

frequency before verb

Es bastante interesante.

It's quite interesting.

degree before adjective

4Alternatives to -mente Adverbs

Long -mente adverbs can sound heavy. Alternatives include: adjective as adverb (hablar claro = hablar claramente), con + noun (con cuidado = cuidadosamente), de manera/forma + adjective (de manera rápida). When two -mente adverbs appear together, only the second gets -mente.

Adverb Alternatives

-mente FormAlternativeMeaning
rápidamenterápido / de prisaquickly
cuidadosamentecon cuidadocarefully
claramenteclaro / con claridadclearly
frecuentementecon frecuenciafrequently

Examples

Habla claro, por favor.

Speak clearly, please.

adjective as adverb

Conduce con cuidado.

Drive carefully.

con + noun

Lo hizo rápida y eficientemente.

He did it quickly and efficiently.

-mente only on second

Trabaja de manera profesional.

She works professionally.

de manera + adjective