Adverbs: relative vs. non-relative (CGEL)¶
Relative adverb¶
In CGEL, a relative adverb is a special type of adverb that introduces a relative clause and at the same time functions as a constituent within that clause, typically indicating time, place, or reason. Its main role is to connect the relative clause to its antecedent and specify the circumstances of the event described.
A subclass of adverb that heads a relative clause.
Has anaphoric reference to an antecedent (typically an NP).
Simultaneously:
introduces the relative clause, and
expresses a gap-related function within that clause (often adjunct-like).
Common relative adverbs in CGEL:
where (place)
when (time)
why (reason)
Example:
the place where we met
where = relative adverb
where we met = relative clause modifying place
where corresponds to a locative gap inside the clause (we met __)
Key properties:
Occurs only in relative clauses
Has an antecedent
Not replaceable by there / then / for that reason without restructuring
Non-relative adverb¶
An ordinary adverb (or adverbial PP) with no antecedent.
Does not introduce a relative clause.
Functions directly as adjunct, modifier, or supplement.
Examples:
We met there
there = non-relative adverb
No antecedent
No clause-introducing role
She left when it got dark
when = subordinator (not relative)
Introduces a temporal adjunct clause, not a relative modifier of an NP
Core contrast¶
Property |
Relative adverb |
Non-relative adverb |
|---|---|---|
Lexical category |
Adverb |
Adverb |
Introduces a clause |
Yes (relative clause) |
No |
Has antecedent |
Yes |
No |
Clause type |
Relative clause |
Independent or subordinate non-relative clause |
Gap inside clause |
Yes |
No |
Usage as common adverbs¶
Relative adverbs like where, when, why can be used outside of relative clauses in certain contexts, though their main function is as relativizers.
As part of a relative clause (typical)
Introducing a relative clause:
The place where we met → RC modifying place
The day when it happened → RC modifying day
The reason why she left → RC modifying reason
This is their canonical use.
As adverbs outside relative clauses
Relative adverbs can sometimes function simply as ordinary adverbs (not introducing an RC), especially in interrogative or clause-initial uses:
Interrogatives (question words):
Where are you going? → where = interrogative adverb
When did it happen? → when = interrogative adverb
Why is she late? → why = interrogative adverb
Conjuncts / adverbial function (rare, formal):
Some can introduce adverbial clauses of time, place, reason in literary style, though this often overlaps with their RC function:
I remember the time, when all was calm. (here “when all was calm” could be analyzed as a free temporal clause, not strictly modifying a noun)
Key distinction¶
Function |
Example |
Comment |
|---|---|---|
Relative clause introducer |
the day when it happened |
RC modifying head noun |
Interrogative adverb |
When did it happen? |
No head noun; adverb in question |
Adverbial clause (less common) |
I remember the day, when all was calm |
More like temporal adjunct than strict RC |
Rule of thumb: Outside of RCs, they are just ordinary adverbs (interrogative or clause-initial), but inside RCs, they act as relativizers.
CGEL alignment note¶
A relative adverb is not a complementizer.
Complementizers (that, whether, if) are heads of content clauses.
Relative adverbs are heads of relative clauses and encode semantic relations (place, time, reason) tied to an antecedent.