Sorry if this is a dumb question, but I just sent someone an email where I used the word “anyplace” and then I started to wonder whether I should have written “any place.” So I looked at various web sites, and they all say that “anyplace” is an adverb.
Why is it an adverb and not a noun? Is “any place” also an adverb? How about “some place”?
How can someone go to something that’s an adverb? If I say I’m going to my house, “my house” isn’t an adverb, so why is “anyplace”?
So when the dictionary says that “anyplace” is an adverb, is this really shorthand for saying that the word “anyplace” functions as an adverbial phrase?
I don’t think that’s satisgfactory. “On the table” is a prepositional phrase that functions as an adverbial. None of the words in that phrase are adverbs.
I’m thinking of a formation, “It can be anyplace.” Here anyplace modifies the verb without the help of a preposition.
No, but close; the word “anyplace” is equivalent to the phrase “to any place”. To clarify, think about the sentence “I come from anyplace”; you can’t just substitute “anyplace” for this phrase, as the resulting sentence “I come anyplace” doesn’t mean the same thing (careful with that sentence in mixed company )
“To any place” is an adverbial phrase with a verb like “send” or “go”, so the single word “anyplace”–its substitute–is an adverb.
“Anyplace” is a single word, an adverb. “Any place” is two words, an adjective and a noun. Two rather different animals. You may say “I will go anyplace”, you CANNOT say “I will go any place”, while you may say “I will go to any place”
Somewhat like “awhile” (an adverb) and “a while” ( an article, and a noun). Used differently.
Anyplace is an adverbial, a word or phrase of time or place that modifies a verb. They usually modify intransitive verbs or the verb “to be”. They may not appear to be adverbs; that’s probably because most of us learned about adverbs in the context of transitive verbs.
And don’t complain; at least we don’t have to write in Latin.
I don’t think it modifies the verb. If I say “I go to the store” or “I go to the beach,” it’s still “I go,” and where I’m going has nothing to do with the quality of how I go.
Well, then what part of the sentence do you propose “to the store” is, if it is not the adverbial phrase? (Diagram the previous sentence for extra credit )
I agree with that. CJJ said the same thing earlier, and I agreed, and it makes sense to me.
So basically, “I go anyplace” is short for “I go to any place” and “to any place” is adverbial phrase. So in this usage, “anyplace” is the adverbial phrase (so to speak) although it is being rendered as one word.
You are getting hung up on something that is an underlying assumption of yours and is incorrect: That “anyplace” is functionally the same as “any place.”
“Anyplace” cannot exist by itself. You can’t say, for example, “Anyplace is fine with me.” In such a sentence, the word “anyplace” would attempt to act as a noun, but that makes the construction of the sentence grammatically incorrect. You would have to say, “Any place is fine with me.” In that correct version, “any” is an adjective modifying the noun “place.”
“Anyplace” is used to modify verbs. One does not just “go,” one “goes anyplace.” This is no different functionally than saying one “jumps quickly.” Thus, the word is an adverb.