The word "moved" is a verb.
"Quite" is an adverb. It's modifying the other adverb "sluggishly" which is modifying the verb "moved".
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The part of speech for "answer" is a noun.
The part of speech for "explicit" is an adjective.
The part of speech for "lecturer" is a noun.
Kill is a verb (to kill) and a noun (moved in for the kill).
"Backwards" is an adverb: "The car moved slowly backwards along the street."
Adverbs tell how, more specifically, adverbs of manner.Example:Martha moved slowly. How did Martha move? Slowly.
The word moved is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb move. Yes it is because your doing something and verb mean doing things so yes...
"Quite" is an adverb. It's modifying the other adverb "sluggishly" which is modifying the verb "moved".
The word metropolitan is an adjective in this sentence.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
part of speech
The part of speech for "answer" is a noun.
what part of speech is beneath
adverb
In the sentence "our new neighbors moved here from a large metropolitan area," the word "metropolitan" functions as an adjective. It describes the noun "area," indicating the type or nature of the area from which the neighbors moved.