Adverbs often indicate location, such as "here," "there," and "everywhere." These words provide information about the placement of the action in a sentence.
Adjective, It tells when.
The word "ending" can function as a noun or an adjective, depending on the context.
The part of speech for "answer" is a noun.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The part of speech for "indefinite" is an adjective.
The word tell is a verb. It means to narrate something such as a tale.
An adverb.
adjective
preposition
The word "ending" can function as a noun or an adjective, depending on the context.
Adjective, It tells when.
The phrase "about as bad" functions as an adverbial phrase. It modifies the adjective "bad" to convey the degree or extent to which something is bad.
As a verb it would be "He lies when he tells the story." As a noun "He tells lies when he talks."
An active verb is required; any other part of speech may be present.
An adverb, an adverb of frequency, because it tells how often you did the verb.
It is a possessive noun. It tells us the plan belongs to God
Yes. A dictionary tells you the part of speech (e.g. adjective) of each word before giving the definition.