The correct way to punctuate the given sentence is: "What has no legs but sometimes runs fast?" asked Mary. The question mark should be inside the quotation marks and followed by a comma before the attribution.
Some people may speak fast due to excitement, nervousness, or because it is a natural communication style for them. Additionally, speaking fast can sometimes be influenced by cultural or regional factors.
They can be nervous, so they unconsciously talk fast and cannot be comprehended well. Or they talk like this naturally. They can also be excited about something.
No, not all adverbs end in -ly. Some adverbs do not end in -ly, such as "fast," "soon," and "well."
Use "which" with a comma before it if the information it provides is non-essential, meaning the sentence still makes sense without it. Use "that" without a comma if the information is essential to the sentence's meaning. Example: "I bought a car, which was blue." (non-essential, use a comma) "I like cars that are fast." (essential, no comma)
fast as in to run like i run fast like the wind or fast as in to starve your self like yesturday we had a fast and now were all starving.
Sometimes you will get a fast response, and sometimes you won't. Someone might see a question that just got asked, and know the answer. And sometimes it can take quite a while.
If Mary is a Secretary, then she can type fast.
People are looking at the site all of the time. So sometimes someone will see a question just after it is asked and then they will answer the question. Sometimes though a question could be a very long time waiting to be answered, so it isn't always fast.
People have to stop placing blame on the fast food industry and place the blame where it belongs: on the individual.
4 legs, sometimes slow, sometimes fast
As fast as any other donkey I reckon; and that means - pretty slow.
run run as fast as you can
Run, Run Fast as You Can.
Time
Doesn't have to be. This music is usually of varied tempos, sometimes slow or fast.
Fast, sometimes slow, depends if it is hurt.
From 20 to sometimes 656mph.