I told John he was welcome to come to my party.
You are welcome to join us for dinner tonight.
In the sentence "your cousin is always a welcome visitor," the word "welcome" is being used as an adjective to describe the type of visitor your cousin is.
No, there is no verb or verb phrase in the sentence "Hello and welcome to Alexander Cave." It is a greeting and introduction, but does not contain an action word.
The neighborhood was considered an enclave of the wealthy, with grand mansions lining the streets.
She spoke in a guttural voice that echoed through the empty hallway.
I can use the word "for" in a sentence to indicate a purpose or reason, such as "I am studying for my exam."
Totalitarianism is a word! and your welcome
It really depends on how you use it in a sentence. "Welcome" could be an interjection, an adjective, a noun, or a verb.
by finding the definition and then make a sentence almost like the definitions and put the word in it and there go your sentence your welcome
Yes, it is typically a word that we use to politely ask someone to do something.
We welcome new members to join in the fight for a liberal democracy.
She spoke in a guttural voice that echoed through the empty hallway.
Example sentence - We are demanding you keep your mangy unmanageable children at your home as they are no longer welcome in our home.
The word 'your' is a pronoun called a possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun. The term 'Your welcome...' means 'the welcome belonging to you', a noun phrase without a verb, not a sentence.'You are welcome.' is a complete sentence ('you' is the subject and 'are' is the verb)'You're welcome.' is a complete sentence (the contraction you're functions as a subject and verb combination)
use that thing they call a text book smart one gosh so slow your welcome
I went to Germany on my vacation. or... Germany is a country with a vast history Your welcome! :D
"I wrote a sentence that uses the word "consummation"."Your welcome =D
'You're welcome' is a contraction of 'You are welcome'. In this sentence, 'you' is a pronoun and 'are' is a verb. But in 'your welcome', the word 'your' is a possessive adjective.