answersLogoWhite

0

Quite is an adverb. Quiet is an adjective.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Is quitely an adjective or adverb?

The word "quite" is an adverb, and modifies adjectives or adverbs (quite large, quite well).*the similar word quiet has the adverb form quietly


What are adverbs in this sentence He traveled quite cautiously through the sandstorm?

The adverbs are quite and cautiously.The adverb 'quite' modifies the adverb 'cautiously', which modifies the verb 'traveled'.


How do adverbs modify other adverbs?

In the sentence "The little old lady walks quite slowly", the word "quite" is an adverb used to describe the adverb "slowly".Adverbs can tell the degree of another adverb. The usual adverbs include not, very, quite, somewhat, too, most, and almost.


What are some adverbs and verbs that begin with the letter Q?

quiet and quickly.


What is the adverb in this sentence Tameesha could sew quite well?

Adverbs modify verbs and other adverbs. In this sentence, there would be two adverbs: quite and well (well refers to how Tameesha can sew, and quite refers to how well she can sew.)


Make a sentence with quite and quiet?

It was quite quiet in the room.


How do you write a sentence using quiet quit and quite?

I'm not quite ready to hear you quit being quiet. If you are quite quiet, I'll quit.


In the early morning he moved quiet sluggishly is this a verb adjective or adverb?

moved is a verb quiet and sluggishly are adverbs early is an adjective


What is the homophones of quiet?

peace, piece


What is a sentence using the word quiet quit and quite?

Can you please quit everyone else is quite quiet! Quit being quiet, it's quite irritating. Quiet queens quit quite queerly.


How can a word be a morphemic noun and a syntactic adverb in the same sentence?

Words can have multiple meanings, even morphemic nouns such as quiet: it can be a noun, an adjective, or by adding -LY can be an adverb. Words such as fast can be homonym nouns, adjectives, and adverbs. There may be no one-word syntactic adverbs, but adverbial phrases can contain non-adverbs and still function syntactically as adverbials. To use an informal idiom "on the quiet" (meaning secretly), a sentence could be "In the quiet of the night, her husband had left to meet his lover on the quiet."


How can a word be a morphemic noun and a syntactic adverb in the same sentence.?

Words can have multiple meanings, even morphemic nouns such as quiet: it can be a noun, an adjective, or by adding -LY can be an adverb. Words such as fast can be homonym nouns, adjectives, and adverbs. There may be no one-word syntactic adverbs, but adverbial phrases can contain non-adverbs and still function syntactically as adverbials. To use an informal idiom "on the quiet" (meaning secretly), a sentence could be "In the quiet of the night, her husband had left to meet his lover on the quiet."