Her is a pronoun.
In this sentence than is a preposition.
"Down" in the sentence given is an adverb of direction and modifies the verb "came".
A verb in its simple past tense or past participle form. The latter form may function in a sentence as an adjective or may be part of a verb form with more than one word, such as "had encountered".
In this sentence, the verb is "had thought" ("had" is a helping verb here, showing the past perfect, or pluperfect, tense). "Thought" is the past participle of the verb "to think."
The word "exercise" can be a verb or a noun.
In this sentence than is a preposition.
"He is taller than you are", is a compound sentence.
"Than" - I am taller than Jennifer.
Yes, the pronoun 'that' is a demonstrative pronoun. The pronoun 'that' is taking the place of the first part of the compound sentence (She was a good six inches taller than he was) as the object of the preposition 'of'.
Down in your sentence is an adverb telling where.
he grew taller than his parents
She is taller than her sister.
This task is mine to conquer! I will conquer taller mountains than this!
There is no pronoun error in that sentence.
can i have more sugestions about the taller than my parents part.
If you mean with "then", you can. But you can't end a sentence with "than", because it's a conjuction An Example of phrase with then: " It should be this way, then. " I
Participle :(In the following sentence the word sufferingis best categorized as which part of speech?)