There are two morphographs in the word "quickly": "quick" and "ly."
Quickly is an adverb
She ate her lunch quickly before heading back to work.
"Rapidus" or "celeriter" are common Latin words that can convey the idea of quickly.
because you say ' a lot ' quickly and because you say it so quickly thats what the word is to you 'alot' but the real spelling is A LOT
"Immediately"
All words are made up of morphographs. All morphographs have meaning. Some words have only one morphograph and other words are made up of more than one morphograph. All the words in these sentences are morphographs which have meaning. The word 'meaning' is made up of two morphographs 'mean' and 'ing'. The word 'words' is made up of two morphographs 'word' and 's'.
You can make a list of them.. of course!
Two. Quick-ly.
2 quick-ly
The notion of a "morphograph" is based upon the linguistic concept of a "morpheme," which is the smallest unit of meaning in oral language. A morphograph is the same concept, but applied to the written language. Essentially, morphographs are prefixes, suffixes, word bases, and non-word bases. While people are familiar with these concepts, instruction rarely capitalizes on these features that make spelling considerably easier and more logical than it otherwise seems. Studying morphographs also better equips students to decipher unknown words by understanding how and why words are formed.
The word "quickly" is in the King James Version of the Bible 39 times. It is in 38 verses.
One. 'le' at the end is not a syllable. Say the word quickly with a strong 'w'!
no it can't because the word quickly is an adjective
Another word for "Happening Quickly" is "Speedily"!
more quickly, most quickly
"Rapidus" or "celeriter" are common Latin words that can convey the idea of quickly.
more quickly