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The question "why" is usually answered by, "because [something]."

The word "because" is a conjunction that joins two parts of a sentence.

Example:

Why are you home early?

I'm home early because the school is closed due to fire.

"I'm home early" and "the school is closed due to fire" are independent clauses because they can stand alone. The word "because" (which answers the question "why") joins them into one sentence (makes them "conjunct").

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Wiki User

15y ago

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More answers

The part of speech that asks: how, when, and where, are adverbs.

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Wiki User

14y ago
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Adverbs of time answer when. Some examples are now, today, and tonight.

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Wiki User

11y ago
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Bit hard to understand your question maybe the answer is:

this / that, these / those, = demonstrative pronouns

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Wiki User

12y ago
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adverb

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Wiki User

11y ago
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ADJECTIVE

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Anonymous

4y ago
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Q: What part of speech answers the question why?
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