After - preposition she - pronoun cleaned - verb the - article room - noun your - pronoun mom - noun asked - verb you - pronoun if - conjunction you - pronoun would - verb move - verb the - article furniture - noun and - conjunction take - verb out - adverb the - article trash - noun
Yes, if the sentence following the question mark and closing speech marks is the start of a new sentence.
The sentence is an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction.
In this sentence, "cynical" is an adjective modifying the pronoun "she." It describes her attitude or behavior.
The word "coming" is a present participle acting as a gerund in the sentence "he saw the multitude coming to him."
"When" is an adverb when it begins a sentence.
Snow in this sentence is the verb.
The subject!
You can use the word mention in the following sentence. I wish that he would mention me in his speech.
Dog
Dangerous is an adjective.
In this sentence, "cynical" is an adjective modifying the pronoun "she." It describes her attitude or behavior.
noun
adjective
Adverb
To is a preposition in that example.
Snow is a noun in that example.
Please include the sentence that is needed to identify the answer.