The word "always" functions as an adverb. It is used to indicate that something is eternal, permanent, or continuously happening.
The part of speech for the word "boulevard" is a noun.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
It is not ANY part of speech, there is no such English word as "stroobly".
The word "sam" does not correspond to a common part of speech in English. It could potentially be a proper noun or an abbreviation specific to a certain context, but without further information, it is difficult to determine its part of speech.
The word "her" is a pronoun, and the word "were" is a verb.
The word the is always an article.
almost always a pronoun
A verb.
The word Texas is a proper noun. Proper nouns are always capitalised.
Adjective, and it will always be one.
An adverb.
The word pessimist is a noun. A pessimist is someone who always expects the worst outcome.
The word Washington is a proper noun. Proper nouns should always be capitalised.
The word Sari is a noun for it is a thing and a noun is always a "person, place, or thing"
The word clothes is a noun. Clothes are items of clothing and it is always a plural noun.
Does is always a verb.When does is next to have you can call it an auxiliary verb or helping verb.
The part of speech that the word my is used as is an adjective.