Manner, place, and time adverbs often appear after the verb or after the object, especially in neutral spoken and written English. This placement lets the main action come first and the details of how, where, and when follow in a natural sequence. When several adverbials appear together, the most common order is manner, then place, then time. For more detail on these groups, see Manner Adverbs, Place Adverbs, and Time Adverbs.
| Idea | Example |
|---|
Manner adverbs often follow the verb or object. | He spoke softly. |
Place adverbs often follow the verb or object. | They met downtown. |
Time adverbs often follow the verb or object. | We arrived yesterday. |
Multiple adverbials usually follow manner, then place, then time. | She sang beautifully at the concert last night. |