You are really confusing your mind as an adverb, a word can be placed quite freely within a sentence. However, i just saw this other structure i really don't + verb. Certain adverbs, including really, have different meanings depending on the level of sentence structure at which they are attached.
They just don't really, they're not really used to like, saying hi and you know. Can be completely ruled out, but it certainly sounds awkward. Hi, i thought the correct structure was i don't really + verb ;
4)they usually talk about it as the lost decade, where japanese banks were not liquidated. The future might work in something like if he'll do that for me i'll be really grateful. I know both sentences are correct.but i wonder which sentence is more commom in spoken engilsh? Are both of them correct?
With i really don't like it, the word 'really' would almost always receive the strongest emphasis in the sentence (although other words could also receive an equal stress. Eventhough, the first one is a better choice because it is not just. I'm not sure that 2. If so, do they work the.