Without a car you’ll never get there.
(emphasises the problem of being carless)
A man in a white coat was making a drill a bit longer.
Near him there stood an
intriguing railway carriage.
In this last example, typical of literary style, the adjunct is brought to the front of
the sentence to link it topically with something important in the sentence before
(the man in the white coat).
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473c Adjuncts
Manner, place and time adjuncts can also be used in mid position to emphasise
them. The emphasis is even stronger than when they are used in front position.
Mid position is particularly common in formal written texts and journalistic and
literary styles:
[about Mark Knopfler, the rock musician]
He
has,
in other ways,
become
an elder statesman of his profession.
Paul Parker
yesterday
chose
to join Manchester United.
I couldn’t stop thinking about the noise of the waterfall. It was a noise that
would never stop. It would always be roaring, even now it
was,
in the middle of
the night, all the days and all the nights,
shattering
itself down the sides of the
crevasse.
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