more welcome
"You are welcome." is indeed a sentence.
my friend is more wellcome at my home at any time.
The word 'your' is a pronoun called a possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun. The term 'Your welcome...' means 'the welcome belonging to you', a noun phrase without a verb, not a sentence.'You are welcome.' is a complete sentence ('you' is the subject and 'are' is the verb)'You're welcome.' is a complete sentence (the contraction you're functions as a subject and verb combination)
'You're welcome' is a contraction of 'You are welcome'. In this sentence, 'you' is a pronoun and 'are' is a verb. But in 'your welcome', the word 'your' is a possessive adjective.
In the sentence "your cousin is always a welcome visitor," the word "welcome" is being used as an adjective to describe the type of visitor your cousin is.
The couple went next door to welcome their new neighbor.
I told John he was welcome to come to my party.
Our answers should be succinct. Welcome to our town.
Yes, welcome. You are welcoming whoever you are talking to.
Yes, it is typically a word that we use to politely ask someone to do something.
more welcome
Most welcome is the superlative form of the adjective welcome.