Hey is an interjection or an exclamation. Often followed by an exclamation mark!
"Hey! They opened the cafeteria early today for breakfast."
The word 'they' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns as the subject of a sentence or a clause.In the sentence, 'They opened the cafeteria early today for breakfast.', the pronoun 'they' is the subject of the verb 'opened', and the subject of the sentence.Note: As used in this sentence, the pronoun 'they' can be considered an indefinite pronoun, a word for unknown or unnamed people.
Breakfast can be used as a noun or a verb. Noun: She had a mushroom omelet for breakfast. Verb: He breakfasted on pancakes and sausage.
direct speech: a speech or a sentence quoted from a sentence somebody had spoken or am speaking. using inverted commas(" ") reported speech: a report of what somebody had said before. direct speech: a speech or a sentence quoted from a sentence somebody had spoken or am speaking. using inverted commas(" ") reported speech: a report of what somebody had said before.
it depends what word it is it could be any part of speech depending on the sentence
An adjective or a pronoun, depending on sentence structure.
The word 'they' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a plural noun or two or more nouns as the subject of a sentence or a clause.In the sentence, 'They opened the cafeteria early today for breakfast.', the pronoun 'they' is the subject of the verb 'opened', and the subject of the sentence.Note: As used in this sentence, the pronoun 'they' can be considered an indefinite pronoun, a word for unknown or unnamed people.
Breakfast is a noun.
The pronoun that replaces the noun 'speech' in a sentence is it.Examples:He seems to have lost the power of speech. He lost it when he opened the bill.The candidate's speech was brilliant. Itbrought cheers from the audience.
It is a verb. Example: He lingered a long time at the cafeteria.
verb
"When" is an adverb when it begins a sentence.
Breakfast can be used as a noun or a verb. Noun: She had a mushroom omelet for breakfast. Verb: He breakfasted on pancakes and sausage.
direct speech: a speech or a sentence quoted from a sentence somebody had spoken or am speaking. using inverted commas(" ") reported speech: a report of what somebody had said before. direct speech: a speech or a sentence quoted from a sentence somebody had spoken or am speaking. using inverted commas(" ") reported speech: a report of what somebody had said before.
what is the figures of speech in the sentence his eyes were not laughing
The individual word "sentence" is a common noun. However, a sentence itself is comprised of many different parts of speech.
In a sentence, the word "action" can function as a noun.
There are no sentences that have no parts of speech. Every word in a sentence is classified as a part of speech, such as nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc.