The word 'athlete' is a noun, a word for someone who is proficient in sports and other forms of physical exercise; a word for a person.
A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Example sentences:
The athlete in the commercial is a gold medal winner. (subject of the sentence)
The company pay the athlete to be their spokesperson. (direct object of the verb 'pay')
Commercial endorsement is a second career for the athlete. (object of the preposition 'for')
She athletically ran the mile. :D lets be friends!!
One must be athletically inclined to successfully complete an obstacle course. The dancer's tryout was athletically inspired.
I believe the closest thing would be athletically. "She works out very athletically."
Yes
formally: more formally, most formally useful: more useful, most useful interested: more interested, most interested familiar: more familiar, most familiar loud: louder, loudest beneficial: more beneficial, most beneficial great: greater, greatest powerful: more powerful, most powerful athletically: more athletically, most athletically
Athletically? Probably. Physically? This is a matter of personal opinion.
Unless you're athletically gifted, Yes.
"Be the leading global retailer of athletically inspired shoes and apparel."
i do not know how to use embalming in a sentence. (there is the sentence)
Stop training and they will soon atrophy (break themselves down)
So- you are asking when to use 'when' in a sentence. When you are asking how to use when in a question, you are already using when in a sentence, because a question actually is a sentence. I like to use when in a sentence whenever I like.
How do you use sedition in a sentence