I don't know if you asking about a part (a portion) of a speech; or are you asking about the parts of speech in grammar (like nouns, verbs, adjectives). If you are asking about the parts of a speech, these would be the Introduction (in which you give your main theme or your thesis statement-- what you plan to prove); the body of the speech (in which you provide proof or evidence, build your case, and prove your point); and the conclusion (in which you sum up your paper and end on a positive note, if possible). As for how you write a part of speech, they are just words: for example, a "noun" refers to a person, a place, or a thing. Some examples: teacher, book, dog, zoo, Massachusetts, Spain, shoes, cupcakes.
To write is a verb.
Write to you soon as a phrase is not one specific part of speech. Write is a verb. To is a preposition. You is a pronoun (object of the preposition.) Soon is an adverb.
Well..Most Of Them...Or Me...Would Write About Global Warming...Or Mabye Anything That You Like Or Your Hobby...Depends On What Kind Of speech That Would Be....
The term "colonial army" is a noun. The plural form would be colonial armies.
The word 'wrote' is a verb. It is the past tense of 'write'.
To write is a verb.
Write to you soon as a phrase is not one specific part of speech. Write is a verb. To is a preposition. You is a pronoun (object of the preposition.) Soon is an adverb.
i would write now
past participle
'would' is a verb and 'all' is an adjective.
It would depend what the speech was regarding.
I is a pronoun, and would is a verb.
That would be an adjective
connectives
The word writing is a noun. It can also be the present participle of the verb write.
Well..Most Of Them...Or Me...Would Write About Global Warming...Or Mabye Anything That You Like Or Your Hobby...Depends On What Kind Of speech That Would Be....
Into and after are prepositions. Above can be used as a preposition and an adverb.