verb
In the sentence, "Which is his sister?", "which" is an interrogative pronoun.
Why is the beginning of a interrogative sentence.
Noun--however, many words have several possible parts of speech; please submit the Whole Sentence when asking for part of speech--cannot be sure without seeing how it is used in the sentence, as that's what determines the part of speech.
In April of 1992, presidential candidate Bill Clinton gave a speech at Drexel University, timed to coincide with the annual observance of Earth Day. Below are links; to an article containing many quotes from that speech, and another containing the full text.
Her is a pronoun.
Coincide is a verb (happen at the same time) This year my birthday will coincide with the state fair.
Coincide is a verb (happen at the same time) This year my birthday will coincide with the state fair.
Wow is an interjection in that sentence.
Turned is a verb in that sentence.
persuasive speech
Imitated is a verb.
the First Amendment protects the right to freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly andpetition.
1. Real Madrid is the name of a team, not the name of a player. 2. In the sentence, "Real Madrid is a famous football player," the word "football" is not a noun. In this context, "football" is an adjective, because it modifies the noun "player." In other contexts, however, the word "football" could be a noun. The context is what often determines the part of speech, not the word itself.
Freedom of Religion (The Establishment Clause and The Free Exercise Clause)Freedom of SpeechFreedom of the PressFreedom of Assembly; andRight to Have sex
The people for a speech is an audience.
The First Amendment includes freedom of speech,press,religion,assembly,and petition.
direct speech: a speech or a sentence quoted from a sentence somebody had spoken or am speaking. using inverted commas(" ") reported speech: a report of what somebody had said before. direct speech: a speech or a sentence quoted from a sentence somebody had spoken or am speaking. using inverted commas(" ") reported speech: a report of what somebody had said before.