Adverbs

Adverbs for Kids | Words That Describe Verbs | Grade 3 | English1to5.com
⭐ Grade 3 • Grammar • Topic 2 of 6🏃

Adverbs

Words That Describe Verbs

Learn words that tell HOW, WHEN, or WHERE an action happens!

📖 Let’s Learn Adverbs!

You already know that adjectives describe nouns (a tall boy, a red flower). Now meet adverbs — they describe verbs! They tell us HOW, WHEN, or WHERE an action happens.

For example, “He runs quickly.” The word “quickly” is an adverb — it tells us HOW he runs. Many adverbs are made by adding -ly to an adjective: slow → slowly, loud → loudly, happy → happily.

💡 The Rule

An adverb describes a verb and tells HOW (quickly, slowly), WHEN (today, yesterday, always), or WHERE (here, there, everywhere) an action happens.

🎯 Key Concept

🏃 HOW: He runs quickly.
🕐 WHEN: She came yesterday.
📍 WHERE: Please sit here.

📋 3 Types of Adverbs

🏃
How (Manner)

quickly, slowly, loudly, carefully, happily

🕐
When (Time)

today, yesterday, tomorrow, always, never, soon

📍
Where (Place)

here, there, everywhere, inside, outside, nearby

🔄
Frequency

always, often, sometimes, rarely, never

-ly Rule

Most adverbs of manner end in -ly: quick → quickly

⚠️
Exceptions

fast, hard, well — these are adverbs WITHOUT -ly

🏃 Word Groups & Examples

Learn with organized examples and sentences!

🏃

Adverbs of Manner (HOW)

quickly
in a fast way
“The rabbit ran quickly.”
slowly
in a slow way
“The tortoise walked slowly.”
loudly
in a loud way
“Don’t talk loudly in class!”
carefully
with care
“Cross the road carefully.”
happily
in a happy way
“The children played happily.”
quietly
without noise
“Read quietly in the library.”
bravely
with bravery
“The soldier fought bravely.”
🕐

Adverbs of Time (WHEN)

today
this day
“Today is Monday.”
yesterday
the day before
“I played cricket yesterday.”
tomorrow
the next day
“The test is tomorrow.”
soon
in a short time
“The bus will come soon.”
already
before now
“I have already finished my homework.”
later
after some time
“I will eat later.”
📍

Adverbs of Place (WHERE)

here
in this place
“Come here, please.”
there
in that place
“Your bag is over there.”
everywhere
in all places
“I looked everywhere for my pencil.”
inside
in the inner part
“Let’s go inside — it’s raining.”
outside
in the outer part
“The children play outside.”
nearby
close by
“There is a park nearby.”
🔄

Adverbs of Frequency (HOW OFTEN)

always
every time
“I always brush my teeth.”
often
many times
“We often play in the park.”
sometimes
now and then
“Sometimes it rains in winter.”
rarely
almost never
“I rarely eat junk food.”
never
not at any time
“I never lie to my parents.”

📢 Read & Say Adverbs

Say each adverb and tell if it answers HOW, WHEN, or WHERE!

quickly (how)yesterday (when)here (where)always (how often)slowly (how)tomorrow (when)outside (where)never (how often)

✏️ Choose the Right Adverb

Choose the right answer!

1. The rabbit runs ___. (in a fast way)

2. I played cricket ___. (the day before)

3. Come ___, please. (this place)

4. I ___ brush my teeth. (every time)

5. Speak ___ in the library. (without noise)

🎯 HOW, WHEN, or WHERE?

Click each adverb to identify its type!

Click any to check!

📝 Sentence Reading Practice

Find the adverbs and their type!

1

The tortoise walked slowly but steadily. (how, how)

2

I finished my homework yesterday. (when)

3

Please come here quickly. (where, how)

4

She always speaks politely. (how often, how)

5

The cat is sleeping inside the house. (where)

6

Sometimes I read quietly at night. (how often, how)

🧠

Memory Trick

Remember: Adverbs answer 3 questions: HOW? (quickly, slowly), WHEN? (today, soon), WHERE? (here, outside). If a word answers HOW/WHEN/WHERE about a verb, it is an adverb!

🎮 Adverbs Quiz

Test what you’ve learned!

What does an adverb describe?

“Quickly” tells us…

“Yesterday” tells us…

“Here” tells us…

Most manner adverbs end in…

“Always” is an adverb of…

Which is an adverb?

“She sings beautifully” — the adverb is…

🎉 Quiz Complete!

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🌟

Fun Facts

The word “adverb” means “add to verb” — it ADDS information to a verb! Ad (add) + verb = adverb.

Not all adverbs end in -ly! Words like fast, hard, well, soon, often, never are adverbs too. “He runs fast” — “fast” is an adverb here!

🧠 Tips for Parents

🏃

Add -ly Game

Say an adjective, child adds -ly: “Slow!” → “Slowly!” “Loud!” → “Loudly!” Quick suffix practice.

📖

Adverb Spotting

While reading, ask “HOW did she run? WHEN did it happen? WHERE did they go?” Answers are adverbs!

✍️

Upgrade Sentences

Write simple sentences, ask child to add adverbs: “He ran.” → “He ran quickly yesterday.”

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