Noun, verbs, pronoun, and adverbs.
A contradictory part of speech refers to when a particular word is used in a way that contradicts its typical part of speech classification. For example, if a word is usually a noun but is used as a verb in a sentence, that would be contradictory.
The word "adhere" is part of the verb in a sentence. For example, "I adhere to the rules and regulations."
The word "decent" can be used as an adjective. Example: "He is a decent person."
An adjective can modify a pronoun by providing more information about the pronoun, such as specifying which one or how many. For example, in the phrase "this red apple," the adjective "red" modifies the pronoun "this."
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The part of speech for "yo" is interjection. EXAMPLE: Yo! What's up?
A word is a part of speech, not a sentence like the one in your example.
Will is an auxiliary verb in that example.
It is a command; do is in the imperative.
Example sentence - His daughter is an antagonist who rarely misses an opportunity.
A dictionary will tell you the part of speech for each word. For example, the entry for "dictionary" will state noun.
The word example is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun.
A suffix changes a word's part of speech. For example, the word 'happy' is an adjective. But when you add a suffix, which is an ending, it can change the part of speech. Happily is an adverb. Happiness is a noun.
"Embarrassing" is an adjective. Example: The embarrassing punch was removed from the table.
Is is a linking verb in that example.
So is an adverb in that example.
A contradictory part of speech refers to when a particular word is used in a way that contradicts its typical part of speech classification. For example, if a word is usually a noun but is used as a verb in a sentence, that would be contradictory.