Always, never, often, and only are adverb. Only can also be used as an adjective (an only child).
That I am is a phrase, the individual words in the phrase are parts of speech. That -- demonstrative, determiner I -- pronoun am -- be verb
Noun--however, many words have several possible parts of speech; please submit the Whole Sentence when asking for part of speech--cannot be sure without seeing how it is used in the sentence, as that's what determines the part of speech.
The words "on the outside" are three different parts of speech. on: preposition the: article outside: noun
part of speech
The word precariously, like most words that end in -ly, is an adverb.
Conjunctions such and, but, & or.
"Teaches" is a verb. "Which" is a pronoun. which part of speech is become
A phrase is never a part of speech, only a word.
'His' and 'he' are pronouns
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.
He, she, and it are pronouns, which are a part of speech that replace nouns to avoid repetition in a sentence.
adverb
infinitive
The word never is an adverb (of frequency). It means under no circumstances.
If "get along with" is considered a small enough number of words to have a part of speech as a phrase, it is a verb.
nothing
Conjunction