Of Manner Listening Exercises — Adverbs

Create your own sentence with the same adverb. Say it out loud.

Doctor: "Breathe _______." Patient: breathes noisily Doctor: "Good. Now speak _______." Audio answer: "Breathe deeply . Now speak normally ."

Listen to 3 sentences with adverbs. Just relax – don’t write.

| Resource | Best for | How to use | |----------|----------|-------------| | (search: "adverbs of manner listening") | Real speech | Watch with subtitles off first, then on | | ELLLO.org (English Listening Lesson Library Online) | Graded audio | Filter by grammar point "adverbs" | | Spotify/Apple podcasts – "6 Minute English" (BBC) | Natural speed | Listen for one adverb type per episode (e.g., all -ly words) | | YouGlish | Varied accents | Type an adverb like "carefully" – hear it in real YouTube clips | A 10-Minute Daily Listening Routine Do this every day for one week. You’ll hear a clear difference. adverbs of manner listening exercises

B – apologetically (showing regret)

Pause after each sentence. Don't try to catch everything at once. Free Resources for Adverbs of Manner Listening You don’t need expensive software. Try these:

Listen again. Write each adverb.

Shadow (repeat aloud) each sentence, copying the speaker’s tone.

Open YouTube. Search "adverbs of manner story." Listen for 2 minutes. Write down every -ly word you catch. You’ve just started. Want more? Reply with your level (beginner/intermediate/advanced) and I’ll send 5 custom listening links.

You know that "quickly" means fast and "carefully" means with attention. But can you hear the difference in a natural conversation? Most learners can read adverbs easily, but they freeze when they have to understand them in a podcast, movie, or real-life chat. Create your own sentence with the same adverb

You listen for tone of voice, speed, and emotion – not just the word. 3. Complete the dialogue (gap-fill) What to do: You see a written dialogue with blanks. Listen and fill in the missing adverbs.

A: "You broke the vase!" B: "I’m so sorry. I’ll fix it." Options: A) angrily B) apologetically C) loudly