Quickly.
"To run" is a verb. Ex: John runs 5 miles every morning.
An adjective describes a noun, whereas an adverb describes a verb. Ex of an adjective: Josephine is amazing with clay. In this sentence, amazing is describing a proper noun, Josephine. Ex of an adverb: Harvey runs quickly. In this sentence, quickly is describing how Harvey RUNS, which is a verb. Also: most adverbs end in -ly, so this is usually a clue on how to distinguish them.
No, calmly is an adverb. The word calm is the adjective form, as used as a verb. Most words with the suffix -ly are adverbs. There are many adjectives that can be transformed to adverbs by adding the -ly suffix. For example, in the sentence "That runner is quick", the adjective quick describes the noun runner, but in the sentence "That runner runs quickly", the adverb quickly describes the verb runs. Be careful; there are exceptions (ally, lily, etc.).
Runs is a verb (3rd person singular), and fast is an adverb.
I need to finish this task quickly before time runs out.
Quickly.
Sure! Here's an example: "She runs quickly." In this sentence, the verb is "runs," the pronoun is "she," and the adjective is "quickly."
"To run" is a verb. Ex: John runs 5 miles every morning.
Some basic sentence patterns with examples are below: Noun + Verb: Jim runs. Noun + Verb + Adverb: Jim runs quickly. Adjective + Noun + Verb: Little Jim runs quickly. Noun + Verb + Direct Object: Jenny made a cake. Noun + Verb + Indirect Object + Direct Object: Jenny made Dad a cake.
An adjective describes a noun, whereas an adverb describes a verb. Ex of an adjective: Josephine is amazing with clay. In this sentence, amazing is describing a proper noun, Josephine. Ex of an adverb: Harvey runs quickly. In this sentence, quickly is describing how Harvey RUNS, which is a verb. Also: most adverbs end in -ly, so this is usually a clue on how to distinguish them.
No. In is a preposition.The predicate is the verb of a sentence and other words that come after the verb.Jon runs. - Jon = subject, runs = predicate.Jon runs to school. Jon = subject, runs to school= predicateIn can be part of the predicate:Jon runs to school in the morning.
No, calmly is an adverb. The word calm is the adjective form, as used as a verb. Most words with the suffix -ly are adverbs. There are many adjectives that can be transformed to adverbs by adding the -ly suffix. For example, in the sentence "That runner is quick", the adjective quick describes the noun runner, but in the sentence "That runner runs quickly", the adverb quickly describes the verb runs. Be careful; there are exceptions (ally, lily, etc.).
AA sowie wla akung ala hha !! give ur own answer nalang
cheetah
In a sentence, the subject is the noun or pronoun performing the action or being described. It usually comes before the verb in a sentence. You can identify the subject by asking "who?" or "what?" is performing the action in the sentence.
Yes, in the example 'he runs quickly but she runs slowly'.