1. Polite people
say thank-you. 2. I have headaches.
3. You have
been working too hard.
4. He always wears a coat,
in summer.
5.
he can do a thing like that.
6.
I have got a meeting in New York.
7. She got dressed
8. This time tomorrow I will be
working in my garden.
9. It will
rain this evening.
10. The children are playing
adverb
fill in blanks
Answers
1. Polite people always say thank-you.
2. I often have headaches.
3. You have definitely been working too hard.
4. He always wears a coat, even in summer.
5. Only he can do a thing like that.
6. Tomorrow I have got a meeting in New York.
7. She got dressed quickly.
8. This time tomorrow I will be happily working in my garden.
9. It will probably rain this evening.
10. The children are playing upstairs.
A modifier or qualifier for an adjective, verb, or other adverb, or a word group, expressing a relationship of place, time, occasion, method, cause, degree, or other factors. The cases are almost always, most likely. A term that belongs to one of the major form classes in any of a number of languages and is usually used as a verb modifier. An adverb is usually identified by the fact that it ends in –ly, however there are several adverbs that do not end in this way. Furthermore, adverbs can be combined in a variety of ways.