Yes, it describes the placement of something, therefore is an adjective (eg. "Today, I came first in the class exam"). It can also be an adverb in the context of "First, I will do this." (replaces the mostly archaic form firstly)
It can be used as an adjective or a noun.
Initial can be used as an adjective, a noun, and a verb.Adjective: initial impressionNoun: Include your middle initial.Verb: Initial here.
yes
First is a superlative adjective. It has no non-superlative form, although you could use "primary" in this way ("most primary" being equivalent to "first" or "foremost").
The - article first - adjective play - noun
It can be used as an adjective or a noun.
Initial can be used as an adjective, a noun, and a verb.Adjective: initial impressionNoun: Include your middle initial.Verb: Initial here.
Yes, "first" can function as an adjective when it is used to describe the noun it precedes. For example, "first place" or "first prize."
The word first *is* an adjective (number one in order, or primary) - e.g. his first car.Ordinal numbers such as first can also be nouns (e.g. a first, the first).
"First" can be an adverb or an adjective, but not a verb.
yes
Term will be the noun, starts the verb and first the adjective.
No, It is not a conjunction. First is an adjective or an adverb, and more rarely a noun (the first).
First is a superlative adjective. It has no non-superlative form, although you could use "primary" in this way ("most primary" being equivalent to "first" or "foremost").
The - article first - adjective play - noun
No, the word I is the first-person singular personal pronoun, nominative case.It cannot be used as an adjective, to modify a noun. The related possessive adjective is my.
The - article first - adjective play - noun