The quiet house was disturbed by the loud football players rejoicing about their victory.
"Keep quiet" is a sentence in the form of an imperative sentence, where the subject "you" is implied. It is a command telling someone to remain silent.
"She was quiet" = past simple "for a long time" = prepositional phrase concerning time Past simple sentence. Does that answer it for you?
In the sentence "please be quiet; you are being too noisy," you would use a semicolon to separate the two independent clauses.
The sentence "Shut up" is an imperative sentence, which gives a command or instruction. It is used to tell someone to be quiet.
No, "quiet" is not a homonym. Homonyms are words that sound the same but have different meanings. "Quiet" is a single word with its own distinct meaning.
While rowing up the creek all Jack could hear was the creak of the ores.
In my house, we savor the peace and quiet while it lasts.
A Quiet Week in the House was created in 1969.
It was quite quiet in the room.
This is a quiet zone.
The duration of A Quiet Week in the House is 1200.0 seconds.
I'm headed for the bunk house right now.
Their house is over there.
"Keep quiet" is a sentence in the form of an imperative sentence, where the subject "you" is implied. It is a command telling someone to remain silent.
"She was quiet" = past simple "for a long time" = prepositional phrase concerning time Past simple sentence. Does that answer it for you?
Quietly is the adverb for quiet.
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."