"Has" is a verb and is classified as a helping verb or auxiliary verb. It is used to show possession, as in "She has a cat," or to form the perfect tenses, as in "He has eaten."
If "get along with" is considered a small enough number of words to have a part of speech as a phrase, it is a verb.
Vorpal is an adjective.
The word "under" can function as a preposition, indicating location or orientation. For example, "under the table" or "under the bridge."
Underwent is a past tense verb.
I go straight to the point it is a noun. :)
A phrase like 'under a vow' is not a part of speech. It is a phrase that is made up of parts of speech. under is a preposition a is an article vow is a noun
Him is a pronoun.
If "get along with" is considered a small enough number of words to have a part of speech as a phrase, it is a verb.
Under the conditions given, "to" is a preposition.
Vorpal is an adjective.
The part of speech for pizza is noun. Noun- person, place, or thing Pizza qualifies under thing so that is why it is a noun
Go is a verb (an intransitive verb).
The word "under" can function as a preposition, indicating location or orientation. For example, "under the table" or "under the bridge."
Underwent is a past tense verb.
The word into is a preposition. It means to go inside of.
on, under, near, along, beneath, above, with, and so on.
If you mean what part of speech it is, then you put it under preposition.