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.
The word binding could belong to more than one part of speech. It could be a participle or a noun.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The word "garish" functions as one part of speech, specifically an adjective. It is used to describe something that is overly bright, flashy, or showy.
Prefixes do not have their own part of speech.
VERB
A contraction is not one of the parts of speech.
A word is a part of speech, not a sentence like the one in your example.
The word "which" functions as a pronoun. It is used to introduce a question that asks for a selection from a definite set of choices.
simili is one
"Translation" is a noun, as is almost every word ending in -tion.
I do not understand why my mother's every word must be obeyed precept.
a speech is when u talk in front of every one a bit like a debate
There is only one part of speech in a noun--noun.
"bags of sweets" isn't one part of speech. "bags" is a noun, "of" is a preposition, and "sweets" is a noun.
Malapropism is a noun. It refers to the mistaken use of a word in place of a similar-sounding one, often with a humorous effect.
there is one part of speech in the word up.