"When" is an adverb. It is used to ask about the time or occasion of an event or action.
The part of speech that answers the question "which one" or specifies a particular item is known as a determiner. Examples include words such as "this," "that," "these," and "those."
The part of speech that answers the question "what kind" is an adjective. Adjectives describe or modify nouns and pronouns by providing information about their qualities or characteristics.
The part of speech that answers the question "where" is typically an adverb. Adverbs provide information about the location or position of the action in a sentence.
The part of speech that answers the question "which one" is a pronoun. Pronouns replace nouns in a sentence to refer to something or someone previously mentioned or understood in the context.
The part of speech that answers "what" or "whom" in a sentence is a pronoun. Pronouns are words like "he," "she," "it," "they," "who," and "what" that replace nouns in a sentence.
The part of speech that answers the question "what kind" is an adjective. Adjectives describe or modify nouns and pronouns by providing information about their qualities or characteristics.
"Close by" is a phrase that functions as an adverb to indicate proximity or nearness.
Bit hard to understand your question maybe the answer is:this / that, these / those, = demonstrative pronouns
transactional speech is when someone answers a question and another person answers it
adjective -- as it answers the question which music. It modifies the noun "music".
adjective
adverb
It is an adverb. It answers the question "where?" The 4 questions an adverb answers are: Where? When? How often? To what extent?
The word 'answerable' is an adjective; capable of being answered; liable to be asked to give account; accountable. Example sentence:You asked an answerable question.
'from' is a preposition
A question mark is a punctuation mark, not a part of speech. It is used at the end of a sentence to indicate that it is a question.
adverbs