Conjunctions such and, but, & or.
Words that are spelled the same but pronounced differently are called heteronyms. These words have different meanings and are pronounced differently based on their context or part of speech.
He, she, and it are pronouns, which are a part of speech that replace nouns to avoid repetition in a sentence.
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.
The word "games" is a noun.
Conjunctions such and, but, & or.
"Teaches" is a verb. "Which" is a pronoun. which part of speech is become
Same is an adjective.
'His' and 'he' are pronouns
Words that are spelled the same but pronounced differently are called heteronyms. These words have different meanings and are pronounced differently based on their context or part of speech.
Suffixes are parts of words, therefore they are not parts of speech. Parts of speech are full words like LOGICAL - CAL is a part of that word that is an adjective.
Adjective
He, she, and it are pronouns, which are a part of speech that replace nouns to avoid repetition in a sentence.
infinitive
adverb
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.
nothing