Adverbial clauses of place identify the location of the action described in the main clause by using subordinators like "where", "wherever", or "everywhere". These clauses can show the location of the main clause action, the direction of the action, or function as a subject, object, subject complement, or object of a preposition. Adverbial clauses of place introduced by "wherever" or "everywhere" are used in a generalizing sense to refer to any and all places.
What Are Adverbial Clauses?
An adverbial clause (or an adverb clause) is a group of words which plays the role of an adverb. (Like all clauses, an adverbial clause will contain a subject and a verb.)
All adverbs (including adverbial clauses) can usually be categorized as one of the following:
Adverb Of Time
Adverb Of Manner
Adverb Of Place
Adverb Of Reason
Adverb Of Condition
Adverbs of Concession
Definition, list and examples in each adverbial clauses.
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2. Adverbial Clauses of Place
The place of the action of the verb of the main
clause
Identified by answering the question where
Introduced by the subordinators:
Where anywhere
Wherever everywhere
3. Adverbial Clauses of place
Introduced by where show:
The place of the action of the main clause
e.g. I signed my name where he showed me.
The subordinator where preceded by the
intensifiers: just, right, even, only, such as:
e.g. Stay just where you are.
The direction of the action of the main clause
e.g. He went where his manager sent him.
4. Adverbial clauses of place
Clauses beginning with where can be nominal and
adjective clauses, performing the function of a
nominal modifier:
Subject: Where he lives is not known.
Object: I don’t know where they live.
SC: This is where he lives.
M: He often goes to the town where he was born.
5. Adverbial Clauses
Introduced by wherever and everywhere are used in
a generalizing sense:
Wherever I go I am welcome.
Everywhere they stopped people gathered around
them.
6. Adverbial Clauses of place
Can function as object of preposition:
e.g. I could see well from where I was.