The adverb quite means "rather", or markedly.
Example : "That mouse is quite small."
It should not be confused with quiet, meaning "silent" or "not noisy".
Example : "It was quiet out in the woods.
There are three similar spellings in English that are often confused :
QUIT (verb) - to surrender, give up, stop
QUITE (adverb) - substantially, markedly
QUIET (adjective) - silent, soundless
The correct spelling is "quietness" (no sound).
just like that :)
Quiting.
I quite work.
I qiuite work
A wardrobe is "une garde-robe" in French. That word is quite old-fashioned and people tend to speak of their "armoires" and "placards" (cupboards) and "penderies" (cabinets where you hang clothes).
you spell it : fromageFromage
you spell it maman
we spell it "rugby"
You spell it: Noviembre.
Quite
The word is spelt as you have done in the question.
it is quite simpleRACHEL
The currant is quite tasty.
The correct spelling is "quiet"
i not quite sure but i spell it fare. i hope this helped you im quite decent with spelling got 55 out of 60 in my spelling sats
The word is spelled attitude. She has quite an attitude.
Not quite. It's spelled 'Neosporin".
It is quite acceptable to spell it as either one word or two. Both Yellowjacket and Yellow Jacket are correct.
The correct spelling is quite different : antidisestablishmentarianism.
Not quite sure how to spell it but i think its differenciate.
quite= tout a fait, completement