It is an adverb, an interjection, and an adjective.
An adverb - Did you talk to your brother last night? No, i didn't. "I didn't" is a sentence, but "NO" makes it more emphatic, so "NO"acts as an adverb here.
Interjection- NO
An adjective - He is "NO" novice when it comes to politics. Here "NO" acts as an adjective because it modifies NOVICE, which is a noun.
The word 'no' is a an adverb, an adjective, and a noun.
Example functions:
We have no more time. (adverb, modifies the adjective 'more')
We have no homework today. (adjective, describes the noun 'homework')
We have one no and three yeses. (noun, a word for a thing)
The word none is a pronoun meaning not any one.
It can also be an adverb meaning to no extent.
"Everybody", "somebody", "anybody", and "nobody" are all pronouns of the indefinite type.
Pronoun.
A contraction is not one of the parts of speech.
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
adverb
what part of speech is work
Injunctions are not a part of speech. Conjunctions, however, are one of the parts of speech.
VERB
A contraction is not one of the parts of speech.
A word is a part of speech, not a sentence like the one in your example.
simili is one
It is a adjective
There is only one part of speech in a noun--noun.
"bags of sweets" isn't one part of speech. "bags" is a noun, "of" is a preposition, and "sweets" is a noun.
there is one part of speech in the word up.
All word in the English language have at least one part of speech. Contraptions is a noun, the plural form of contraption.
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
The word binding could belong to more than one part of speech. It could be a participle or a noun.