He yawned conspicuously and checked his watch, but she either ignored it or was oblivious to it, because she continued chattering on like nothing had happened.
They were conspicuously snorting cocaine on the dance floor, and then they acted all surprised when the bouncers told them to leave.
Our boss was conspicuously absent from the office Christmas party, and although many theories have been put forth, nobody really has a clue why.
She yearned for him conspicuously, which made her the laughingstock of the entire office.
To write a sentence using an adverb clause that illustrates "why," you can structure it by starting with the main clause and then adding the adverb clause to explain the reason. For example: "She decided to stay home because it was raining." Here, "because it was raining" is the adverb clause that answers the question of why she chose to stay home.
im not sure where to start
I was looking very conspicuous with my mismatched clothes and purple hair. A black widow spider has a conspicuous red hourglass shape on its abdomen.
The adverb usually follows the verb it is modifying: The shirt was made well. You played well today.
As an adverb: Show me how to make a fire in the fireplace.As a noun: This is how I build the material for the fire.
I think of him all the time while he doesn't even know me.
can you write a sentence using the wordFragmentary
nearly is the adverb of manner
As a modifier to the verb. Sentence: "The boy was running through traffic". Using the adverb "recklessly" as an adverb: "The boy was recklessly running through traffic".
Benign (harmless, inoffensive) is an adjective, not an adverb. A sentence using the adverb, benignly. "He smiled benignly at the bullies, knowing that he would have his revenge on them in a few hours."
I can write a sentence using the word scorn!
It is entirely possible to write a sentence using the term 'it is'.