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First of all, I'm sorry to correct your question, but it should be: "Do actions speak louder than words?" because actions is the plural form of the noun.A plural subject uses 'actions do'; a singular subject uses 'action does'.'Than' is a conjunction used for comparison, as in this sentence.'Then' is an adverb to place the verb's order in time.
Yes, first is an adverb as well as an adjective. The word "firstly" is technically an adverb, but is not used to modify a single word, but an entire predicate.
The first section of the Declaration of Independence defines democracy.
Yes, it is an adverb meaning in the first or most prominent manner.
Yes. It is a prepositional phrase, used as an adverb.
It can be either an adverb or an adjective: In "you need to work harder", it is an adverb. But in "I wanted to do the harder tasks first", it is an adjective.
There is an adverb based on the adjective inaugural(first), which is inaugurally (for the first time, or more directly 'as part of an inauguration').
"First" can be an adverb or an adjective, but not a verb.
yes
I in Warhammer stands for Initiative which in close combat defines who hits first. It also defines how much you must roll to steal Initiative from the person who deployed first.
No, It is not a conjunction. First is an adjective or an adverb, and more rarely a noun (the first).
The word "firstly", meaning "initially" or "finishing in the first position", is an adverb but and is not considered to be proper for use in formal English. "First" is the preferred word.