The phrase "etc" is an abbreviation. The full form is et cetera.
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.
Parts of speech are like nouns, verbs, adjectives, article, pronoun etc.
They could be used as several different parts of speech. Typically the entire phrase acts as one part of speech... a noun phrase, a verb phrase, etc.
No, a word cannot be two parts of speech at the same time. A word has a specific part of speech based on its function in a sentence, such as noun, verb, adjective, etc.
Tropical in parts of speech
parts of speech is the different types of words in a sentence.Figures of speech is how you speak
They/he/she/the doctor(etc) asked me where I was from. Or if you are asking the question: I asked him/her/etc where he/she/etc was from. I asked them/etc where they/etc were from.
articles are actually a type of determiner (adjective) because of this it is not included in parts of speech.
There are many views on how many parts there are in a speech. Traditionally there were 8, but it now varies gently to 9, 10, 11, 12, etc. The parts would include pronoun, noun, verb, adjective, adverb, preposition, interjection and conjunction. Some include articles, quantifiers, and numerals.
The Parts of Speech - 1967 was released on: USA: 1967
Tropical in parts of speech
Suffixes are parts of words, therefore they are not parts of speech. Parts of speech are full words like LOGICAL - CAL is a part of that word that is an adjective.