The word "tired" is an adjective.
In the sentence "You are extremely tired," the word "tired" is an adjective describing the state of being of the subject "you."
In "he said that he was tired," the word 'that' is a subordinating conjunction that introduces a noun clause ('that he was tired'). It functions as a connector between the main clause ("he said") and the subordinate clause ("he was tired").
The part of speech for the word "boulevard" is a noun.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
"Stroobly" is not a standard English word, so it does not have a designated part of speech.
In the sentence "You are extremely tired," the word "tired" is an adjective describing the state of being of the subject "you."
Adjective
Adjective.
In "he said that he was tired," the word 'that' is a subordinating conjunction that introduces a noun clause ('that he was tired'). It functions as a connector between the main clause ("he said") and the subordinate clause ("he was tired").
Depends on the context. If its something like, "she tired me" then its a verb. If its something like, "I am tired" then its an adjective. Hope this helps...Tired is not a verb it is an adjective.The verb is tire. The sentence should be she tires me.The past tense of the verb "tire" is "tired".
The part of speech that the word my is used as is an adjective.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The part of speech for the word diplomacy is a noun.
The part of speech for the word civilian is English grammar.
H is a letter, not a word. To be a part of speech, it needs to be a word.
The word speech is a noun.
Tired is an adjective in this case.It can also be a verb (the past tense of the verb "tire")