It's "quietly". An adverb "modifies" a verb (or an adjective, etc). That means it gives more information about the verb. The verb here is "studied". The adverb, quietly, tells you how Theresa studied.
No, "quietly" is an adverb. It describes how an action is performed. For example, in the sentence "She whispered quietly," "quietly" is describing how she whispered.
is wrap a noun or verb
The word 'noun' is not a verb. The word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
Change the verb "run" into a noun. Change the verb "cook" into a noun.
No, the word 'play' is a noun (play, plays) and a verb (play, plays, playing, played).An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Examples:I have tickets to the new play. (noun)I sent the children to play while I make lunch. (verb)The children are playing quietly with Legos. (the adverb 'quietly' modifies the verb 'playing')
No, the word 'play' is a noun (play, plays) and a verb (play, plays, playing, played).An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Examples:I have tickets to the new play. (noun)I sent the children to play while I make lunch. (verb)The children are playing quietly with Legos. (the adverb 'quietly' modifies the verb 'playing')
Quietly is an adverb, based on the adjective quiet.
A 'doing word' is a verb. The word quietly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb or an adjective. Example sentences for quietly:She sang quietly to the baby. (sang is the verb, quietly describes how she sang)You may play some music if you play it quietly. (play is the verb, quietly describes how it should be played)
A verb.A noun is a name. I remember it as something you can draw. (FOOT)A verb is an action. (CRIED)An adjective is a describing word. (BEAUTIFUL)An adverb describes a verb. (QUIETLY)The kind girl sweetly smiled at me.Kind = AdjectiveGirl = NounSweetly = AdverbSmiled = Verb
The is an article, tall is an adjective, man is a noun, was is a verb (linking), veryis an adverb, and quiet is an adjective.
There is no adverb in this sentence. "Muddy" is an adjective, which modifies a noun. The only verb, "left" is unmodified. If you said, "We quietly left our muddy shows outside," then "quietly" would be an adverb, modifying the verb "left."
It's "quietly". An adverb "modifies" a verb (or an adjective, etc). That means it gives more information about the verb. The verb here is "studied". The adverb, quietly, tells you how Theresa studied.
No, "quietly" is an adverb. It describes how an action is performed. For example, in the sentence "She whispered quietly," "quietly" is describing how she whispered.
Yes, chuckled, meaning to laugh quietly or inwardly, is an action, therefore it is a verb.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
She quietly walked through the dark hallway in the castle? She ; pronoun quietly ; adverb walked ; past tense verb through ; conjunction the ; definite article dark ; adjective hallway ; common noun in ; conjunction the ; definite article castle ; common noun .
Normally a noun, it is rarely used as a verb. An archaic (old fashioned) use of spirit was that when something had been quietly stolen, that it had been spirited away.