Show your work, in both cases, and see the differences in the calculation.
FWIW, although order of reaction is VERY important to students, it is a pretty tough thing to determine experimentally. You have to be careful.
The definitions of first order and second order reactions can give you a hint to which is likely for this particular reaction.
Concentration can change the order, because it may interfere with out ability to determine it. Doesn't really change it, just masks the result for us.
I hope you don't mind my answering your question, with more questions that you now have to work on. That is what we do here. That's specified in the
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For example:
How is this even possible? Can the same reaction have two different orders?
What sort of answer were you hoping to get from these questions.