"Parole" can be a noun, verb, or adjective, depending upon usage.
Noun: Mom says I'm no longer grounded; I'm just out on parole.
Verb: Please parole me!
Adjective: The parole board will see me next week.
speech
Parole is the French word for speech. Ferdinand de Saussure used the word parole to mean the individual speech acts of a person, or the individual's own speech. He used the word langue, which means language, to mean the larger, more impersonal idea of language as a whole.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
part of speech
The part of speech for "answer" is a noun.
what part of speech is beneath
adverb
Til Parole Do Us Part - 2005 was released on: USA: 6 September 2005 (LA International Festival of Shorts)
Attested 1616, "word of honor," especially "promise by a prisoner of war not to escape," from French parole "word, speech" (in parole d'honneur "word of honor") from Gallo-Romance root paraula "speech, discourse," from Early Latin parabola. Sense of "conditional release ( prisoner ) before full term" is first attested 1908 in criminal slang. The verb (1716) originally was what the prisoner did ("pledge"); transitive meaning "put on parole" first attested 1853
la liberté de parole, la liberté d'expression
The part of speech for "explicit" is an adjective.
The part of speech for "lecturer" is a noun.