Answer:
- morning; adverb of time
- lazily; adverb of manner
- loudly; adverb of manner
- often; adverb of frequency
- extremely; adverb of degree
- patiently; adverb of manner
- easily; adverb of manner
- there; adverb of place
- here; adverb of place
- merrily; adverb of manner
The first word is the adverb to be underlined, and the next part after the semicolon is the type of adverb.
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Explanations:
- We use an adverb of time to describe when the verb "went" occurred. In this case, it occurred in the morning.
- The adverb "lazily" describes how the dog is sitting. It modifies the verb "sat". We have an adverb of manner to describe the verb. It describes how the verb is being performed.
- Similar to problem 2. This time "loudly" modifies how the man is grumbling.
- We have an adverb of frequency to describe how often an event occurs, which in this case is "often".
- An adverb of degree is applied to describe the scale of how hot it is. Think of a number line or chart.
- Similar to problem 2. The "patiently" describes how the person should wait.
- Similar to problem 2. The verb is "fixed" and the adverb "easily" describes how the problem was fixed, or the manner it was fixed.
- We use an adverb of place. Such examples include things like "here", "there", etc. In this case, the adverb "there" modifies the verb "serve".
- Similar to problem 8. This time the adverb "here" is tied to the verb "waiting".
- Similar to problem 2. The "merrily" describes how the person is laughing.
Side note: usually, but not always, words that end with "ly" are adverbs.