The building blocks of English
Affixes
-ly
Also ‑ily.
Forming adjectives and adverbs.
Old English adjectival ending ‑lic or adverbial ending ‑līce, of Germanic origin.
One set of adjectives indicate a quality of some kind. They usually derive from nouns, though some are based on other adjectives: beastly, cleanly, cowardly, deadly, evenly, gladly, heavenly, neighbourly, rascally, scholarly, weakly. Many can also be adverbs, though some, such as miserly and unruly, are restricted to adjectival use. A second set indicate something recurring at an interval: hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, yearly; these can all act as adverbs.
The ‑ly ending most characteristically marks adverbs, and is the usual way of forming them from adjectives. A very large number exist, of which a few examples are apparently, commonly, electrically, essentially, foolishly, freely, greatly, immediately, occasionally, surprisingly, thankfully, and wrongly.
Adverbs formed from adjectives that end in y preceded by a consonant replace the y by a i to make the ending ‑ily: busily, drowsily, floppily, hastily, lazily, primarily, wittily.
Support this website
This dictionary contains more than 1,250 entries, illustrated by some 10,000 examples, all defined and explained for your information and emjoyment.
There are no advertisements to interrupt your reading pleasure. I rely on your generosity to cover running costs. Donations made via PayPal are secure.