
- always
- never
- sometimes
- often
- occasionally
Use this table to help you choose suitable adverbs to describe how often you are thinking of (NOTE: the percentages in this table are approximate to illustrate the level of each adverb).
| 100% of the time | Always |
| Less than 100% but more than 50% of the time | Often, usually, frequently, generally |
| Around 50% of the time | Sometimes |
| Less than 50% but more than 10% of the time | Occasionally, seldom |
| Less than 10% but more than 0% of the time | Hardly ever, rarely |
| 0% of the time | Never |
The examples above are called indefinite adverbs of frequency – they talk about a percentage of frequency. There are also definite adverbs of frequency that talk about specific amounts of time. Here are some examples:
- hourly, daily, weekly
- once, twice, three times
- every minute, once an hour, a few times a year
- monthly, quarterly, annually
The position of adverbs of frequency
The position of the adverb depends on other words in the sentence.
Position 1: After the ‘be’ verb (subject + TO BE + adverb)
- John is always late.
- Teachers are occasionally wrong.
Position 2: Before the main verb is there is no ‘be’ verb (subject + adverb + main verb)
- John always drives to work.
- Teachers occasionally give students too much homework.
Position 3: With an auxiliary verb (have, will, must etc), the adverb is put between the auxiliary and the main verb. (subject + auxiliary + adverb + main verb)
- John might never work again – he won the lottery!
- Teachers can sometimes give students too much homework.
