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Words that belong to the same part of speech have similar grammatical properties and functions within a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The cat chased the dog," both "cat" and "dog" are nouns, while in the sentence "She quickly ran home," both "quickly" and "ran" are verbs.
I quickly gave a backward glance.
Yes, you can have two adverbs in a sentence. For example, "She quickly and quietly finished her homework." In this sentence, "quickly" and "quietly" are both adverbs describing how she finished her homework.
The verb in this sentence is "running" and the adverb is "quickly."
first of all..... that is a common sense question... to answer that, its quickly.
"End" and "afternoon" are the nouns.
"End" and "afternoon" are the nouns.
I see that your need for a quick answer is quite right. Was that sentence quite proper? The taxi arrived quite quickly.
She quickly embraced her husband as he arrived home.*embrace means basically to hug someone close and tight*
No
She quickly changed her wig before the cops arrived.
The adverb of the sentence is quickly.
She had scarcely imagined he would leave so quickly. It had scarcely been two minutes before the man arrived home. I'd scarcely believed it would happen so soon.
quickly
I was chasing my dog quickly down the road
The adverb is quickly.
He answered the question quickly and accurately.