slowly
Fast can be both an adjective and an adverb for "moving fast" (rapid, rapidly), and for "held fast" (secure, securely). The car drove fast. (adverb) The line must be tied fast to the pier. (adverb) * The form fastly, when used, refers to this second meaning.
Mae drove at 14mph?
Some examples of adverbs are these that modify verbs by answering one of these questions:Where?: there, everywhere, nearby, underneathHow?: beautifully, slowly, sweetly, sadlyWhen?: weekly, monthly, yesterday, today, tomorrowAdverbs mostly qualify verbs and adjectives.He patted the dog GENTLY.He ran FASTER.We OFTEN eat fried fish.The story was AMAZINGLY interesting.Many but not all adverbs end in -ly (a suffix added to the adjective form).Some are gracefully, meaningfully, sneakily, strongly, quickly, quietly, finally. An adverb uses -ly at the end and modifies a verb.Once the test was over, she walked slowly out of the classroom.We tried really hard to get the muffin mixture perfect.The seamstress quickly made the mourning clothes.The boldly spoken words would return to haunt the rebel.We urged him to dial the number moreexpeditiously. (first adverb modifies second adverb)Unfortunately, the bank closed at three today.The government has cut university budgets; consequently, class sizes have been increased.I watch them closely.I walked more carefully.He has not played chess recently.Lately, I have had many sleepless nights.He is completely tired from the journey.The man quickly got in the car.He peacefully drove his car to the old house.He happily walked up to the door and swiftly knocked on it.The door opened immediately.The man angrily got in the car.He frantically drove his car to the old house.He ferociously walked up to the door and loudly knocked on it.The door opened violently.
To get the answer, you would divide how many miles he drove by how long it took him to drive it. The information you need to set up your problem is 150 miles and 2.5 hours. 150 / 2.5 = 60 So Jordan drove an average of 60 miles per hour.
He drove 20 miles in 50 min. so average was 20 x 60/50 = 24 mph
it is black or slowly I am evan from mount lawley primary school in perth
the adverb is there
The adverb is "there".
There is the adverb
Far is the adverb. It tells where (in distance) we drove.
No, "north" is not an adverb. It is a noun or adjective that indicates a direction on the compass.
No...it is a noun. I think you mean NOISILY, as in "The car drove noisily past."....which IS an adverb.
No, it is the past tense of the verb "to drive."
It can be an adverb (used without an object) or a preposition. There is an old dog that comes around. (adverb) We drove around the block. (preposition)
It can be either, because there is no adverb form (fastly) for speed.A fast car (adjective)He drove fast (adverb)
Best
Yes, it can be. "He drove northwest to find the camp." Northwest can be an adverb or an adjective, or also a noun (a direction or region).