"Mine" is a special form possessive pronoun, used in modern English only when the possessive pronoun is separated from the noun it modifies by a verb form or by enough words to make the connection between the possessive pronoun and the noun that it modifies otherwise obscure. Examples: That is my book, and that pen is mine also. (separated by verb in the second independent clause) Her coat is red, but mine is blue. ("mine" is separated from the word it modifies, coat, by the three-word phrase "is red, but". All of the normal possessive case pronouns that do not end in the letter "s" have special form possessive pronouns of this type: yours, hers, ours, and theirs.
"Mine" can also be: a regular verb, meaning to extract naturally occurring minerals from the Earth; or a noun, meaning either a place where the activity of mining is or has been carried on or a type of weapon that triggers an explosion when touched by sufficient pressure. The noun can also be used as a "substantive adjective", as in the phrases "mine safety" or "mine gases".
The word "mine" can function as both a pronoun and a noun, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
Adjective
The word "unison" is a noun.
The word "taunts" is a verb.
you is a prounoun
NOUN
The likely word is "speech" (verbal communication, or a spoken message).
you is a prounoun
A part of speech is a category that classifies words based on their function in a sentence. Common parts of speech include nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections. Each part of speech plays a specific role in conveying meaning within a sentence.
Their is a pronoun
adjective
"Tomorrow" is a noun.
NOUN
There are eight parts of speech in English: nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections. Each part serves a specific grammatical function in a sentence.
The likely word is "speech" (verbal communication, or a spoken message).
"What" can function as an interrogative pronoun, used to ask for specific information, or as a relative pronoun, connecting a clause to a noun. It can also be an adverb, modifying a verb or adjective.
Johannes Spech died in 1836.
Johannes Spech was born in 1767.
"Mine" is a special form possessive pronoun, used in modern English only when the possessive pronoun is separated from the noun it modifies by a verb form or by enough words to make the connection between the possessive pronoun and the noun that it modifies otherwise obscure. Examples: That is my book, and that pen is mine also. (separated by verb in the second independent clause) Her coat is red, but mine is blue. ("mine" is separated from the word it modifies, coat, by the three-word phrase "is red, but". All of the normal possessive case pronouns that do not end in the letter "s" have special form possessive pronouns of this type: yours, hers, ours, and theirs. "Mine" can also be: a regular verb, meaning to extract naturally occurring minerals from the Earth; or a noun, meaning either a place where the activity of mining is or has been carried on or a type of weapon that triggers an explosion when touched by sufficient pressure. The noun can also be used as a "substantive adjective", as in the phrases "mine safety" or "mine gases".