English, asked by mrudulaturankar, 5 months ago

I When she was born.
the
Practise
Let's
choose
politely
surely
often
tomorrow
inside
when
outside
where
hence
therefore where
yesterday
1.
2.
.. told us to come
3.
He
We ..
. you plan to see her.
5.
6.
........ she's unhappy.
You can
have a word with the boss.
... is she going?
7.
8.
9.
antecedents, the place, the year.
Blve information about the words place and the year and refer to the
Please tell him that we are waiting.
He left for London
Please tell her ....
Soma was not invited for the wedding;
De adverbs where and when join the subordinate clause to
adverbs from the box below to fill in the blanks. Also, identity the type of adverbs
used in the sentences.
meet our former teacher in the neighbourhood.
Do you know a shop.
...... I can buy used laptops from?​

Answers

Answered by deepikamr06
1

Answer:

In order to fill in the blank with the most suitable adjective or an adverb, let's understand what adjectives and adverbs are.

Adjectives are the words that define/explain nouns or pronouns. For example: Roshni is pretty. Here, 'Roshni' is the noun and 'pretty' explains how she is, hence 'pretty' is the adjective.

Adverbs are the words that describe action words (verbs). For example: Ram fought bravely. Here, 'Ram' is the noun and 'fought' is the verb. 'Bravely' describes how he fought, hence it is the adverb.

NOTE: We need a word to describe the time and way she comes. Since 'comes' is a verb, the word that describes it is called an adverb. Hence, we need an adverb fill in the blank. 

Option A - 'Lately' is an adverb, but it means recently. The sentence means that she is rarely on time. Thus option A is incorrect.

Option C - 'Lateness' is a noun and not an adverb. Hence, option C is incorrect.

Option D - 'Lateful' is a wrong word. Thus option D is incorrect.

Option B - 'Late' is an adjective and an adverb both. It can be used as an adverb here, which describes the time and the way she comes (reaches) for her lectures. Hence, option B is the correct answer.

'She often comes late for the lectures.'

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