Quietly is the adverb for quiet.
The adverb of quiet is quietly.
An example sentence for you is: "tiptoe quietly past the door".
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.
Still and quiet
Both. In the sentence "Are you still here?", it is an adverb; in the sentence "The water was quiet and still", it is an adjective.
Yes, quietly is an adverb.Some example sentences for you are:He quietly entered the house.If you could talk quietly in the library, or better not at all, that'll be great.
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."
Quietly is the adverb for quiet.
No, it isn't, it's an adjective. The adverb is quietly.
quietly
Quite is an adverb. Quiet is an adjective.
Quietly is an adverb, based on the adjective quiet.
Quietly is an adverb, based on the adjective quiet.
"Quiet" is an adjective and "quite" is an adverb.
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.
Still and quiet
Both. In the sentence "Are you still here?", it is an adverb; in the sentence "The water was quiet and still", it is an adjective.
The word "quite" is an adverb, and modifies adjectives or adverbs (quite large, quite well).*the similar word quiet has the adverb form quietly
moved is a verb quiet and sluggishly are adverbs early is an adjective