"Quickly" is an adverb that describes the speed or pace at which an action is performed. It signifies a fast or swift manner of doing something. In the context of your sentence, it emphasizes the urgency of returning home promptly after school.
The adverb in the sentence is "loudly." It describes how their mother called for them to come home.
The word "except" can be a preposition: "Everyone went home from school except me." a conjunction: "Everyone except me went home from school." an idiom: "I would have gone home except for detention." or a verb: "The teacher will except those students in detention from going home."
"Nostalgia" came from the Greek words "nost" (to come home) and "algia" (pain.)
Yes, it is one word homecoming.
There are two morphographs in the word "quickly": "quick" and "ly."
The adverb form is "quickly." *In some cases, as with "fast" the word quick may appear instead of quickly, e.g "Come quick" instead of "Come quickly."
Given all the snow, George ran, because he was desperate to get home quickly: the school buses were not running.
The Exaphes quickly established a new home on Mars.
The Afrikaans word for "school" is "skool."
No she is a personal pronoun.She ran to school. - in this sentence she is the person/thing doing the actionShe ran quickly to school. - in this sentence quickly tells us more information about how she ran.Quickly is an adverb - adverbs give extra information about verbs - the verb is ran
She was aggrieved that he would not come home for the summer.
The adverb in the sentence is "loudly." It describes how their mother called for them to come home.
Many articles have been written about the government raid in Waco, Texas. After a day at school and hours on the basketball court, the boys come home and raid the refrigerator.
Just come across the bridge now, quickly please. I'm sorry, but their signal is too weak to come across this wavelength.
The word "except" can be a preposition: "Everyone went home from school except me." a conjunction: "Everyone except me went home from school." an idiom: "I would have gone home except for detention." or a verb: "The teacher will except those students in detention from going home."
The correct place is following the word home in the sentence, as follows: After school she needs to walk home, do her homework and wash dishes.
You startled me, because I hadn't heard you come home.