The word 'classified' is a verb (classify, classifies, classified, classifying) and an adjective (classified ad or classified information).
"Classified" can be a verb or an adjective. As a verb, it indicates the act of organizing or categorizing something. As an adjective, it describes information that is restricted or confidential.
There are no sentences that have no parts of speech. Every word in a sentence is classified as a part of speech, such as nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc.
"Anything" can be classified as a pronoun or a noun, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
"Sparate" is not a word in the English language. It seems like a spelling error or a non-standard term, so it cannot be classified as a specific part of speech.
"Never" is typically classified as an adverb, used to indicate that something does not or will not happen at any time.
The articles "a," "an," and "the" are classified as determiners. They are used before nouns to specify whether the noun is specific or nonspecific.
The word gosh is classified as an interjection.
It is a compound noun or noun phrase.
"The" is a definite article. Definite articles are usually classified as a subset of adjectives.
This would be classified as formal.
Words are classified as parts of speech based on their function as a word. If they are classified based on their role in the sentence, they are parts of a sentence. (there is not much difference between the two, but there is a difference)
"play" is a verb in this sentence, functioning as the main action word.
part of speech
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
adverb
what part of speech is work
what part of speech is beneath
Sashay is a verb. It means to walk in an exaggerated, showy manner, often with hip swaying.