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The word "whom" is a pronoun. It is used as the object of a verb or preposition in a sentence.
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.
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"Close by" is a phrase that functions as an adverb to indicate proximity or nearness.
The word "whom" is a pronoun. It is used as the object of a verb or preposition in a sentence.
Pronoun
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In speech and writing the answer to whom (and what) is a noun or pronoun. For example: Whom did John Doe accuse? Answer: He accused Bill Smithers. What did Jane Doe eat?Answer: She ate sirloin steak followed by raspberries with cream.
adverb
"What" is a pronoun. It's the object form of "who", meaning that's used after prepostions ("to whom, by whom") and in formal speech as the direct object of verbs (whom should I tell?) "What" can be a pronoun, adjective, or adverb. In "What did you say?" it's a pronoun. In "what books have you read?" it's an adjective. In "what with one thing and another, this is hard" it's an adverb.
"Close by" is a phrase that functions as an adverb to indicate proximity or nearness.
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PREPOSITION
A verb, as in "Copying answers blindly off the Internet may disqualify you."
adjective -- as it answers the question which music. It modifies the noun "music".
transactional speech is when someone answers a question and another person answers it