Please reword your answers...
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 phrase "will remind" is a verb in future tense. The verb "will" is an auxiliary verb; the verb "remind" is a main verb.Example: I will remind Mona that the meeting is today.
Please include the sentence that is needed to identify the answer.
In the sentence, "Which is his sister?", "which" is an interrogative pronoun.
Why is the beginning of a interrogative sentence.
"Please" in this sentence is an adverb, modifying the verb "allow" to make the request more polite.
Supervisor is a noun.
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.
Please include the sentence that is needed to identify the answer.
The phrase "will remind" is a verb in future tense. The verb "will" is an auxiliary verb; the verb "remind" is a main verb.Example: I will remind Mona that the meeting is today.
If you mean, please write this sentence with correct punctuation, it would be:Why have you got an umbrella?
State can be a noun or a verb. In this sentence it is a verb: State your name, please. In this sentence it is a noun: What state do you live in?
Set the table for me please.In this sentence set is a verb. This sentence is an imperative sentence and imerative setence usually don't have subjects so the first word is the verb.Other examples:Sit down. Come in. Be quiet please. Watch out!
The phrase "will remind" is a verb in future tense. The verb "will" is an auxiliary verb; the verb "remind" is a main verb.Example: I will remind Mona that the meeting is today.
"When" is an adverb when it begins a sentence.
The very instant she left the room, I KNEW that I had been passionately used. Passionately is used fervently in a sentence. Please tone down your passionately presented speech.
A comma is typically not needed after the word "please" in a sentence unless it is part of a direct address. For example: "Please, pass the salt." In most cases, such as "Can you please help me," a comma is not required after "please."