Question:

He is not normally a very fast runner, but he runs fast in major events.

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Words like "very," "extremely," and "quite" are adverbs when they intensify adjectives or other adverbs.
Updated On: Aug 12, 2025
  • adverb
  • adjective
  • verb
  • noun
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

The underlined word "very" is used here to intensify the adjective "fast."
An adverb can modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb, and in this case, it is modifying the adjective "fast."
Option (b) "adjective" is incorrect because "very" is not describing a noun; it is modifying an adjective.
Option (c) "verb" is wrong because "very" is not an action.
Option (d) "noun" is incorrect because "very" is not naming anything.
Example: "She was very happy to see her old friends." — here, "very" intensifies the adjective "happy" in the same way it intensifies "fast" in the given sentence.
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