Its Mrs. Leorio
as in play "quietly", yes.
most quietly
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.
Qui-Et-Ly=Quietly. So, meaning that there are three syllables in the word quietly.
"More quietly" and "most quietly": "quietly" has three syllables, and the suffixes "-er" and "-est" are generally used only with root words of one or two syllables. yea honney
No, "quietly" is not a base word. The base word is "quiet," and "quietly" is an adverb formed by adding the suffix "-ly" to the base word.
No, adverbs don't always end in -ly. Very, not, often, quite, and well are only a few adverbs that don't take the -ly suffix.
Please come in Quietly. quietly They attacked England.
Quietly was created on 2008-07-22.
Yes, the word quietly is an adverb.An example sentence is:"We quietly walked out of the library."
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.
Please sit quietly.
as in play "quietly", yes.
most quietly
"Quietly" is an adverb, not a verb or noun. Adverbs typically describe how an action is performed, in this case, how something is done quietly.
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.
Qui-Et-Ly=Quietly. So, meaning that there are three syllables in the word quietly.