The word "indefinite" is an adjective.
The part of speech for "indefinite" is an adjective.
An is an indefinite article. When used with an article, opening is a noun.
Severely is an adverb.
indefinite pronoun
The word "an" is an indefinite article and is used before nouns to indicate that the noun is singular and begins with a vowel sound.
indefinite pronoun
indefinite pronoun
Anyone is an indefinite pronoun.
It's an indefinite article which is a type of determiner that precedes a noun. "A" and "An" are indefinite articles, and "The" is a definite article.
an adjective
An is an indefinite article. When used with an article, opening is a noun.
The English language includes a part of speech that the Latin language doesn't. That part of speech is the article. The Latin language has neither definite nor indefinite articles. So it has no equivalents of 'a' and 'the'.
"Everybody", "somebody", "anybody", and "nobody" are all indefinite pronouns.
"A" is an indefinite article as opposed to "the" which is a definite article. Depending on the context of the sentence it can also be a noun.
The letter 'a' is a noun because it's a thing. All letters of the alphabet are nouns.The word 'a' is an indefinite article. Articles are in the adjective part of speech.
A is an article - an indefinite article. There are two indefinite articles a and an. An is used before words that start with a vowel.eg an apple, an advance, an orangutang -- a helicopter, a fence, a peacock
"The" is the definite article, as opposed to "a" or "an" which is the indefinite article. When you speak of "the man", you refer to a specific man (definite). When you speak of "a man", that can refer to any man (indefinite).