Introduction to Adverbs
An adverb is a word or an expression that modifies a verb. For example: The man hardly works. The adverb hardly modifies the verb work
In Gothic, most adverbs are formed from adjectives using the suffix -ba. Examples: mikils great; mikilaba greatly; raihts right; raihtaba rightly.
Another way Gothic created adjectives was through the suffix -o. Some examples:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| andaugjo | openly | 
| analeiko | in the same manner | 
| sinteino | continually | 
| sprauto | quickly | 
| sniumondo | quickly, with haste | 
Comparative Degree
The comparative degree of adverbs generally end in -is, -os. Examples:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| aris | earlier | 
| faurþis | beforehand | 
| framis | further | 
| hauhis | higher | 
| sniumondos | with more haste | 
Superlative
Only two adverbs of the superlative degree are attested:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| frumist | first of all | 
| maist | most of all | 
Adverbs of Time
Adverbs of time are expressed either by simple adverbs such as:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| air | early | 
| ƕan | when | 
| ju | already | 
| nu | now | 
| þan | then | 
Or by oblique cases of nouns and pronouns such as:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| himma daga | today | 
| gistradagis | tomorrow | 
| du maurgina | tomorrow | 
| dagis ƕizuh | day by day | 
| ni aiw | never | 
Adverbs of Place
Adverbs of place end in -r or -a. Some examples:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| aljar | elsewhere | 
| her | here | 
| ƕar | where | 
| þar | there | 
| faura | before | 
Adverbs of Motion
Adverbs of motion have either no suffix or end in -þ(d), -dre. Some examples:
| Gothic | English | 
|---|---|
| dalaþ | down | 
| ƕaþ, ƕadre | whither | 
| jaind, jaindre | thither | 
| hidre | hither | 
Adverbs with the Genitive Case
The genitive case is something used adverbially as allis wholly; andwairþis over against; nahts at night; and raihtis indeed.