Wondering how to hyphenate the English word Beginnings? This word can be hyphenated and contains 3 syllables as shown below.
1. |
The event consisting of the start of something The beginning of the war |
2. |
The time at which something is supposed to begin They got an early start She knew from the get-go that he was the man for her |
3. |
The first part or section of something `It was a dark and stormy night' is a hackneyed beginning for a story |
4. |
The place where something begins, where it springs into being The Italian beginning of the Renaissance Jupiter was the origin of the radiation Pittsburgh is the source of the Ohio River Communism's Russian root |
5. |
The act of starting something He was responsible for the beginning of negotiations |
6. |
Take the first step or steps in carrying out an action We began working at dawn Who will start? Get working as soon as the sun rises! The first tourists began to arrive in Cambodia He began early in the day Let's get down to work now |
7. |
Have a beginning, in a temporal, spatial, or evaluative sense The DMZ begins right over the hill The second movement begins after the Allegro Prices for these homes start at $250 |
8. |
000 |
9. |
Set in motion, cause to start The U.S. started a war in the Middle East The Iraqis began hostilities Begin a new chapter in your life |
10. |
Begin to speak or say Now listen |
11. |
Friends |
12. |
He began |
13. |
Be the first item or point, constitute the beginning or start, come first in a series The number `one' begins the sequence A terrible murder begins the novel The convocation ceremony officially begins the semester |
14. |
Have a beginning, of a temporal event WW II began in 1939 when Hitler marched into Poland The company's Asia tour begins next month |
15. |
Have a beginning characterized in some specified way The novel begins with a murder My property begins with the three maple trees Her day begins with a workout The semester begins with a convocation ceremony |
16. |
Begin an event that is implied and limited by the nature or inherent function of the direct object Begin a cigar She started the soup while it was still hot We started physics in 10th grade |
17. |
Achieve or accomplish in the least degree, usually used in the negative This economic measure doesn't even begin to deal with the problem of inflation You cannot even begin to understand the problem we had to deal with during the war |
18. |
Begin to speak, understand, read, and write a language She began Russian at an early age We started French in fourth grade |
19. |
Serving to begin The beginning canto of the poem The first verse |