Complete the sentence with "He".
I was quite relieved when I lanced a boil.
The parts of speech in the sentence "THE WEATHER WAS QUITE WARM" are: Article (THE) Noun (WEATHER) Verb (WAS) Adverb (QUITE) Adjective (WARM)
The adverb is quite, which modifies the adjective late.
You can be going along quite happily, then bing; it does a U-turn.
"Quite" is an adverb. It's modifying the other adverb "sluggishly" which is modifying the verb "moved".
can see quite well
Example sentence - We were quite bewildered by the recent events concerning the disappearance of books from the library.
The mummification process is not quite complete.
lake Tahoe
Not quite. Use "so that the doctor..." What the sentence means is unclear, however.
I see that your need for a quick answer is quite right. Was that sentence quite proper? The taxi arrived quite quickly.
I could use quite nicely quite nicely in a sentence today. This box fits quite nicely in the trunk.
Well, since prepositions are words that describe where things are, I have come to the conclusion that the question, "Where did you say it was?" is quite logical.
Example sentence - I quite enjoyed reading the book Rudy Guiliani wrote titled 'Leadership'. His great example of leadership will endure for decades to come.
That's not quite the right answer
I was quite relieved when I lanced a boil.
It was quite quiet in the room.