Shark Learning
Grade 4/Adverbs

Building Adverbs: The -ly Rules (1378)

Most adverbs are built from adjectives — but the rules for adding -ly are trickier than they look! This printable worksheet for Grades 3–4 teaches the four formation patterns, including silent-e drops, -y→-ily changes, and the irregular exceptions every student needs to know.
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Quick Tip
Most adjectives: add -ly  ·  quick → quickly
Ends in -e: drop e, add -ly  ·  gentle → gently  ·  Irregular: good → well  ·  fast → fast
Teacher Resources
Teaching Notes

Turn this into a spelling-meets-grammar lesson. Write the five rules as a class anchor chart. The "-y to -ily" rule is hardest — drill it separately with 5 examples before the worksheet.

Vocabulary
Adverb: A word that describes a verb, adjective, or another adverb.
-ly Rule: Most adjectives change to adverbs by adding -ly.
Common Mistakes
  • happy → happyly (forgetting y→i change)
  • gentle → gentlely (not dropping the silent e)
  • good → goodly (not knowing the irregular form "well")
  • fast → fastly (adding -ly to a word that doesn't change)
Differentiation
SupportProvide the five rules as a reference box on the page.
ChallengeWrite a sentence using 5 of the adverbs formed.
Discussion Questions
  • Why do you think "good" doesn't follow the normal rule?
  • Can you find three more -y adjectives and convert them?
Extension Activities
  • Find 10 -ly adverbs in a book. Reverse-engineer the adjective they came from.
  • Spelling bee: only -ly adverbs. Focus on the tricky patterns.
Parent Tip

Ask your child to say adjectives and have them change them into adverbs.

Learning Path
Skill Level

beginner

Estimated Time

15 minutes

Skills Practiced
forming adverbs from adjectivesidentifying adverbs