The second bell at school was about too ring, So I ran quickly as possible too class before marked absent.
EX. "He ran very quickly to his house."
Yes, you can use an adjective and adverb in the same sentence. For example: "She quickly ran to the bus stop." In this sentence, "quickly" is the adverb describing how she ran, and "bus stop" is the adjective describing the type of stop.
The man ran quickly.Ran being the verbAnd quickly being the adverb
Both sentences are grammatically correct, but they have slightly different meanings. "The dog ran quickly" refers to a specific dog that ran quickly, while "A dog ran quickly" refers to any dog that ran quickly. The use of "the" implies specificity, while the use of "a" implies generality.
you add the '-ly' to the sentence. like, if you say: i ran quick to the store. it doesnt make sense, you have to add the adverb to the word quick. so it would be i ran quickLY to the store.
Sara ran towards the house.
She ran the race unusually quickly. The dance was unusually crowded. The area of the sunburn was unusually large. Angie's fingernails were unusually tiny.
Sally has a skittish personality so she has trouble making friends.
Jim won the race, but Sherly was an also-ran.
I swiftly ran away.
I ran into a spider WEB.
The correct way to say the sentence is, "Mr. Jones and he ran the fair."