Afterwards is a connecting adverb with the meaning "later" applied to a time or event. e.g. "He ate supper, and afterwards went for a walk."
Yes, "afterwards" is an adverb, not a preposition. It is used to indicate a time that is after a particular event or period.
The Abaluhya (Luhya) term for the English word 'afterwards' is "baadayee".
No
No
We ate lots of cake, and afterwards we went home.
Postea.
If you mean "afterwards", then it would be something like, "We went to the store and afterwards, to the movies."
Postscript.
You can use "afterwards" to indicate something that happens after a particular event or time. For example, "She finished her work, and afterwards, she went for a walk in the park."
Some other meanings for the word "then" are: As an adverb: next, after that, after, afterwards. As an adjective: former
Hovering a word in a sentence make it easy to find afterwards.
There are a few antonyms for the word before such as after, later, behind and afterwards.