another word for first

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It’s not a word, it’s a concept. A first. A first date. A first kiss. A first job. A first cup of coffee.

If you want to get started on this new word, you have to start with the first person. A first is a person who has done or experienced something special. It could be a first date, a first kiss, a first job, or a first cup of coffee (or whatever).

To use an analogy, if you want to get started on a new word, you need to start with the first person. A first is a person who has done or experienced something special, and it could be a first date, a first kiss, a first job, or a first cup of coffee or whatever.

So what’s the first person? Well, I know the answer but I’ll give it to you in the form of a question.

Well. The first person is the person I don’t know the answer to. Or rather, the person I don’t know the answer to that could be the first person. But the first person could be the person who has done or experienced something special. I didn’t say there was only one first person, I said there could be more than one. But the first person could be the person I dont know the answer to.

If we have a list of “first people,” we can also list the first person to do something. For example, someone who’s been in the White House, but who has not actually taken the first official step of being there. A president is just the person who has the power to make that happen. But the first person of any kind can be the person I dont know the answer to.

We might also want to think of the first person as someone who has come up with the idea of what to do, but the person who actually does the action. So if I have a list of people who are in the White House, and I have a list of people who just helped them do their job, I could also have a list of people who just helped them do their job, but who are not in the White House.

If I have a list of people who were in the White House, and I have a list of people who just helped them do their job, I could also have a list of people who just helped them do their job, but who are not in the White House.

“Just help them do their job” could be interpreted as either “I helped them do their job” or “I helped them do their job, but I didn’t actually do it myself”. Which is it? We don’t know, but it makes it even more confusing.

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