used to lớn emphasize the degree or amount of something, or to lớn say that someone or something is impressive, interesting, or unusual:
Quiet /kwaɪət/ và quite /kwaɪt/ are spelt and pronounced differently, & have different meanings. …
Quite is a degree adverb. It has two meanings depending on the word that follows it: ‘a little, moderately but not very’ và ‘very, totally or completely’: …
When we use quite with a gradable adjective or adverb, it usually means ‘a little, moderately but not very’. It has a similar meaning to lớn ‘rather’ or ‘fairly’: …
When we use quite with a non-gradable adjective or adverb (an extreme adjective or adverb has a maximum and/or minimum, for example right – wrong), it usually means ‘very’, ‘totally’ or ‘completely’: …
In informal speaking, we often use quite with like, enjoy, understand & agree to talk about our opinions or preferences. Depending on the context, it can mean ‘a bit’, ‘a lot’ or ‘totally’. We usually put it in the normal mid position for adverbs (between the subject & the main verb, or after the modal verb or first auxiliary verb, or after be as a main verb): …
We often use not quite to lớn mean ‘not completely’. We can use it with adjectives, adverbs, nouns, non-finite clauses, prepositional phrases & wh-clauses: …
Quiet /kwaɪət/ & quite /kwaɪt/ are spelt và pronounced differently, và have different meanings. …
Quite is a degree adverb. It has two meanings depending on the word that follows it: ‘a little, moderately but not very’ và ‘very, totally or completely’: …
When we use quite with a gradable adjective or adverb, it usually means ‘a little, moderately but not very’. It has a similar meaning lớn ‘rather’ or ‘fairly’: …
When we use quite with a non-gradable adjective or adverb (an extreme adjective or adverb has a maximum and/or minimum, for example right – wrong), it usually means ‘very’, ‘totally’ or ‘completely’: …
In informal speaking, we often use quite with like, enjoy, understand và agree lớn talk about our opinions or preferences. Depending on the context, it can mean ‘a bit’, ‘a lot’ or ‘totally’. We usually put it in the normal mid position for adverbs (between the subject và the main verb, or after the modal verb or first auxiliary verb, or after be as a main verb): …
We often use not quite to lớn mean ‘not completely’. We can use it with adjectives, adverbs, nouns, non-finite clauses, prepositional phrases & wh-clauses: …
Quite a is used before some nouns lớn emphasize the large number, amount, or kích cỡ of the subject referred to:
Eight building phases on a single farmyard are exceptional, but three or four overlapping ground plans are quite common.
It is quite clear then that an artificial frame of some kind does not exclude the possibility of an organic development.
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