It is an adverb, an interjection, and an adjective.
An adverb - Did you talk to your brother last night? No, i didn't. "I didn't" is a sentence, but "NO" makes it more emphatic, so "NO"acts as an adverb here.
Interjection- NO
An adjective - He is "NO" novice when it comes to politics. Here "NO" acts as an adjective because it modifies NOVICE, which is a noun.
A contraction is not one of the parts of speech.
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
adverb
Injunctions are not a part of speech. Conjunctions, however, are one of the parts of speech.
The word afford is a verb.
VERB
A contraction is not one of the parts of speech.
A word is a part of speech, not a sentence like the one in your example.
simili is one
There is only one part of speech in a noun--noun.
"bags of sweets" isn't one part of speech. "bags" is a noun, "of" is a preposition, and "sweets" is a noun.
The part of speech that answers the question "which one" or specifies a particular item is known as a determiner. Examples include words such as "this," "that," "these," and "those."
there is one part of speech in the word up.
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
All word in the English language have at least one part of speech. Contraptions is a noun, the plural form of contraption.
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
As one word, thunderstruck is an adjective.