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Are you asking adjective adverbs There are many such words.
Adverbs that generally end in ly (with exceptions) are used to modify the verb or adjective he did this successfully
Adjectives are used to describe nouns, and there are also those that end in ly, such as lively lovely, the girl is lovely
It's good for you to accumulate these slowly.
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I didn't understand it.
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While concatenated verbs are to be continuous, when is not specified.
b.Between is between the two, and over has the meaning of crossing. Past is used in the past perfect tense in British English and in American English in the past tense.
a modern high-rise
a 800-meter high mountainbe likely to
a agree with somebodyput up rising; Raise put your hands upRaise your hand.
put on....Please put the kettle onPlease put the kettle on it.
Put on; Put on he put on his coat and hat and went out
He put on his shirt and hat and went out.
compare yourself with others can use this.
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b cross.The creek flows through the city from east to west.
Just now, just now, in the past, in the past, you can do it.
a modern tower
a 800-meter high mountainvery probable to
withput on: put up: Raise your hand, erect compare yourself with others yes.
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I think 'defeated' means 'defeated' is defeated
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1. A idiomatic expressions and fixed sentence patterns.
2. A The four meanings are different, needless to say.
3. c Emphasis. it.
4 d be widely used fixed with 5 c ditto.
6. C is the only one that conforms to the scene and syntax.
7. d do not need to do sth It is better to do something in the future or do it yourself.
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1b so + inverted means the same action.
2a not only but also means not only but also fixed collocation.
3c is the opposite of the first question of not inverted meaning that it is true, 4d be done is used widely adverb 5c enough is placed after the adjective.
6c because there is no going in front and there is neither in the back and continue to invert 7b needn't here is a substantial verb that does not need to be preceded by a verb.
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b. The preceding is the future tense.
d、either...or...No. It is.
c. Yao Ming is male.
d. Phrases. c, enough when doing a postpositional predicate, add an adjective or adverb in front of it To do a preposition, a predicate is a noun after it.
c. Neither
d, need is a substantial verb in this sentence, and the answer to exclude b c is wrong.
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A is not in the right tense, B I will also go to c, I will indeed go to d, I will not go (the previous sentence must be a negative sentence).
Not only.. and b both. and c neither. Nor is it d'n. It is.
3 CSO+Flip "also... the same".
so state "Indeed".
State so "so, so".
4 d passive voice.
5 cenough + n.
adj./adv. +enough
6 cab same as 3 c I don't go (the previous sentence must be a negative sentence) d There is no such saying7 dneed modal verb need do needn't do substantive verb need to do don't need to do
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