Directions: Look at the sentences below and decide whether an adverb or adjective is
needed. Circle your choice. Then underline the word it modifies. (Hint: adverbs
usually, but not always, end in “ly').
1. The house looked (empty, emptily).
2. Jason pitched (wild, wildly).
3. The choir sang (good, well).
4. Those hills look (beautiful, beautifully).
5. The teams were matched (even, evenly).
6. The cheese on this cracker tastes (strange, strangely).
7. You print so (neat, neatly).
8. Ron arrived (prompt, promptly) at ten.
9. I go to the gym (regular, regularly).
10. The snow fell (steady, steadily).
11.The solution to the crime seemed (obvious, obviously).
12. The hem of the skirt was (real, really) crooked.
Answers
Answered by
9
Answer:
- empty
- wildly
- well
- beautiful
- evenly
- strange
- neatly
- promptly
- regularly
- steadily
- obvious
- really
Here's ur answer..
Hope it helps..
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Answered by
11
Answer:
The noun or a verb can be modified with the application of adjective and adverb. They describe a noun or a verb in a better manner.
Explanation:
- 1. The house looked empty
- 2. Jason pitched wildly.
- 3. The choir sang well.
- 4. Those hills look beautiful.
- 5. The teams were matched evenly.
- 6. The cheese on this cracker tastes strange.
- 7. You print so neatly.
- 8. Ron arrived promptly at ten.
- 9. I go to the gym regularly.
- 10. The snow fell steadily.
- 11.The solution to the crime seemed obvious.
- 12. The hem of the skirt was really crooked
The words in bold are the suitable adjective or adverb as it modified the underlined words.
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