Adverbs are simply words that describe verbs (an action or a doing word). • He ate his breakfast in a hurry. The adverb 'quickly' describes how he ate (the verb) his breakfast.
Put your coats and hats here.
Adverbs are used in sentences to provide additional information about the verb or action. It also has the property of describing one or more adjectives.
An adverb is a word that is used to change, modify, or qualify several types of words, such as an adjective, a verb, a clause, another adverb, or any other type of word or phrase that, with the exception of determiners and adjectives that directly modify nouns, is used to change, modify, or qualify them. Adverbs are best understood by picturing them as the words that provide context.
To learn more on adverbs
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Answer:
C) They enter into the water supply when it rains.
Explanation:
"When it rains, runoff from fertilizers and pesticides, which farmers use to help crops grow, can pollute the water"
The passage used a combination of comparison and contrast and: <span> C. cause and effect.
</span>The passage give us a well descriptive explanation on how the microorganisms (the cause) developed in such a way to the point where their fossils ended up as a petroleum/coal (effect)