adverbials of probability

 

Adverbials of probability

We use adverbials of probability to show how certain we are about something. The most frequent adverbials of probability are:

certainly - definitely - maybe - possibly
clearly - obviously - perhaps - probably

maybe and perhaps usually come at the beginning of the clause:

Perhaps the weather will be fine.
Maybe it won’t rain.

Other adverbs of possibility usually come in front of the main verb:

He is certainly coming to the party.
Will they definitely be there?
We will possibly come to England next year.

but in after am, is, are, was, were:

They are definitely at home.
She was obviously very surprised.

Exercise

Comments

psl's picture

i scored 100% 

najada gjonomadhi's picture

these exersises are great for us! :)

redon shindre's picture

wow i scored 100%.Thast great
 

scottfieldwang's picture

i'm extremely confused about " He said he would definitely be there"could i say"He definitely said he would be there"or "He said he would be definitely there"
Please tell me which one is correct?thank you

arona05's picture

 I have 153/155 I think it's not good mark

Hafsa Abid's picture

hello
i scored 155 out of 155 and i am very happy

durraan2002's picture

I am a bit confused with the difference between maybe and may be, could you explain to me plz?

Erik_CO's picture

Hi durraan,

'Maybe' is an adverb which means 'perhaps' or 'possibly.' 'Maybe I will have a beer tonight,' for example.

May be is a verb phrase which means 'might be' or 'could be.' 'This may be the best English website ever,' for example.

I hope this helps.

-Erik

The LearnEnglish Team

babar zaman's picture

Learning on British Council site is amazing, It is enormous help to the first-time learner as well as the advanced learners. Thanks to BC

kaamk2002's picture

hi
actually it is perfect exam  thank  you very  much