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 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.
I don't think so. Because an adverb gives information about a verb it is hard to think of an example where 'first class' can add information to the verb.maybe: She road her bicycle first class.Often adverbs formed from adjectives end in -ly quiet - quietly. So first class could be first classly!!
No, it is not an adverb. Truthful is an adjective, and the adverb form is "truthfully."
adverb is word that modified a verb,adjective.or other adverb
The best way to derive an adverb from a noun is to first change the noun to an adjective, and then convert that adjective to an adverb, usually by adding "ly" at the end. For example, in this case, we can derive the adjective "secure" from the noun "security," and then add "ly" at the end of this adjective to make it an adverb. So, you end up with the word "securely."
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
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.
The Battle of Bunker Hill was the first major battle OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION an adverb phrase!
No, it cannot. The word first is either a noun, an adjective, or an adverb.
Close! it's an adverb, but it's also an adjective as well.
The firemen arrived first, then the police. We wanted to see the movie first, before our friends did.
No, "originally" is actually an adverb that is used to describe when something first existed or happened. It is not a conjunction that joins words, phrases, or clauses.