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Hi, guys. I'm Alex. Thanks for clicking, and welcome to this lesson on "bad" vs "badly".
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Now, this lesson is a complement to a past lesson that I did on "good" vs. "well". And
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with "bad" vs. "badly", it's actually a very similar kind of case.
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So very simply, first, let's look at the parts of speech that "bad" and "badly" represent.
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As I have written here, "bad" is an adjective, which means that it describes either a state
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of something or someone or a feeling, okay? So think of states and perceptions, feelings,
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with "bad". "Badly" is an adverb. Now, again, an adverb
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usually modifies a verb. It can also modify adjectives and other adverbs -- generally
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verbs, though. And it describes how you do, how you perform, or how you react to something,
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okay? On the board, I have a variety of different
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sentences, and in all of them, you have to decide whether I should be using "bad" or
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"badly" to complete the sentence. So as we go through this, just always use these two
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definitions as a personal reference, okay? Sentence No. 1 says, "He felt bad/badly about
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missing her birthday." So what do you think? "He felt badly about missing her birthday"
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or "He felt bad about missing her birthday"? If we go back to the rules, if we're talking
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about feelings, it's always "bad", okay? "He felt bad." Now, if I said, "He felt badly
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about missing her birthday", this would mean that you're modifying the verb "felt", and
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you're actually trying to say that he felt "badly", like his sense, his perception of
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feeling, of touch, is very poor, which doesn't make the sentence make any sense, okay?
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So second sentence says, "She did bad/badly on her chemistry exam." So let's look back
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here. How you do/perform/react to something. Okay. How did she do on her chemistry exam?
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"She did badly." She performed badly. Okay? "I twisted my ankle." Okay. How did you twist
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your ankle? Well, really, really badly. Okay? So "bad" or "badly", actually. And I think
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I gave you the answer, so -- how did she twist her ankle? The quality of the injury. "She
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twisted it badly." When she twisted it in the moment of the action, it was really bad,
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so she did it badly, she did the action badly, okay? Sorry. I'm repeating myself a lot. "Bad",
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"badly" -- you will be sick of hearing these words by the end of this lesson.
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Next one: "He is a bad singer" or "He is a badly singer"? Now, again, a singer, a person
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who sings a song, [sings "lah lah lah"], etc., and we're talking about the state of this
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person. What kind of singer is he? So we're modifying "singer", so "He is a bad singer."
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Now, remember: "badly" -- there's no verb here that you're modifying, right? You can't
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really modify the verb "to be" in this situation with "badly". You can't say, "He is badly"
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just by itself, okay? So next one: "They felt bad" or "They felt
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badly about coming late." If we go back to the rules -- feelings, right? So how do you
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feel? You feel bad. Internal state. "They felt bad about coming late." So they came
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to a meeting. They came to a party, a movie, something -- oh, sorry. I feel bad about that,
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okay? Next one: "She danced bad" or "She danced
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badly at her recital". So maybe she dances ballet, and they had a performance. A performance
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is like a recital. And she danced -- you're talking about the quality of her dancing.
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So how you perform something -- how you do something is, in this situation, "badly".
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So how did she dance? "She danced badly." Now, "This tastes bad" or "This tastes badly"?
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Now, what are we talking about here? Are we talking about -- "this", whatever it is, whether
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it's a soup, a sandwich, a hamburger, a steak; doesn't matter. You're talking about the state
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of the thing. You're talking about the flavor, the taste, the internal state, okay? So when
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we go back here, "This tastes bad." Now, again, if we said, "This tastes badly", the meaning
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would be that -- let's imagine it's a steak. So this means that the steak can eat other
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things and that the steak tastes things badly, okay? It means that it doesn't have a sense
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of taste, that the steak can't taste things very well because its tongue is not good,
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okay? So you can imagine the image is not very appetizing I guess. I wouldn't want to
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eat a steak that was talking. Although before it's a steak, it's a cow, but that's another
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topic. Let's not get into that. And finally, "Their reasons didn't seem so
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bad." Okay, so here, the topic, the subject, is their reasons, their reasons for doing
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something. Now, we're talking about how the reasons did something? Are we talking about
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the state of the reasons? The quality of them? Okay. In this situation, when you have verbs
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like "seem" or "feel" or "appear", generally, we use the adjective form, okay? So "Their
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reasons didn't seem so bad." We're talking about the state of their reasons.
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Okay, guys. If you'd like to test your understanding of this material, and again, go through "bad",
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"badly", do more examples like this, you can check out the quiz on www.engvid.com. And
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I wish you guys luck. I hope that you don't do bad -- or badly? -- on the quiz. You tell
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me which one is correct. And don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel, as always.
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Take care, guys. I'll see you later.