Quickly.
He did that equation very quickly.
The old man ran suprisingly quickly for his age.
Yes, "quick" is primarily an adjective, used to describe nouns. The adverb form of "quick" is "quickly," which is used to modify verbs. For example, in the sentence "She runs quickly," "quickly" describes how she runs.
has been. Always is an adverb
No, the word 'curiosity' is a noun, a word for a thing.An adverb is a word used to modify a verb or an adjective. For example:His curiosity quickly found the answer. (noun, subject of the sentence)The adverb 'quickly' modifies the verb 'found'.
first of all..... that is a common sense question... to answer that, its quickly.
Yes, a verb phrase can be split by an adverb or adverbial phrase. For example, in the sentence "I will quickly finish my homework," the adverb "quickly" splits the verb phrase "will finish."
The adverb of the sentence is quickly.
The adverb is quickly.
"Is" is the verb. There is no adverb in the question.
"Quickly" is an adverb.
Like this: I did my history homework yesterday. That's how you use yesterday as an adverb in a sentence
In the sentence the film was over too quickly, there are two adverbs too and quickly.In this sentence the adverb too is used to strengthen the meaning of the adverb quickly.
To determine which sentence has an underlined adverb modifying another adverb, you need to identify sentences where one adverb describes the manner or degree of another adverb. For example, in the sentence "She ran very quickly," the underlined adverb "very" modifies the adverb "quickly." Here, "very" enhances the degree to which she ran quickly.
quickly
The adverb in that sentence is downstairs. It's an adverb of place and tells where you ran.
An adverb modifies another adverb.Example:You did your homework rather quickly. - The adverb rather is modifying the adverb quickly.