Notebook

Notebook, 1993-

DIMENSIONS: MEASURE / Proportion

Beginning











First . . . . Early . . . . Origin . . . . Initial . . . . Onset . . . . Inception . . . . Start . . . . To Proceed, Commence, Originate, Inaugurate, Initiate . . . . Open . . . . Entrance


R  E  F  E  R  E  N  C  E  S 
Beginning n. 1. act or circumstance of entering upon an action or state. 2. the point of time or space at which anything begins: the beginning of the Christian Era. 3. Often beginnings. the first part of initial stage of anything: the beginnings of science. 4. origin; source; first cause: A misunderstanding was the beginning of their quarrel. -Syn. 1. initiation, inauguration, inception. 2. start, onset. -Ant. 1. ending. 2. end.

Begin v.i. 1. to proceed to perform the first or earliest part of some action: commence or start. 2. to come into existence; originate: The custom began during the Civil War. -v.t. 3. To proceed to perform the first or earliest part of [some action]: Begin the job tomorrow. 4. to originate; be the originator of: Civic leaders began the reform movement. [ME beginn[en], OE beginnan = be- BE- + -ginnan to begin, perh. orig. to open, akin to Yawn] -Syn. 3. Begin, Commence, Initiate, Start [when followed by noun or gerund] refer to setting into motion or progress sometihng that continues for some time. Begin is the common term: to begin knitting a sweater. Commence is a more formal word, often suggesting a more prolonged or elaborate beginning: to commence proceedings in court. Initiate implies an active and often ingenious first act in a new field: to initate a new procedure. Start means to make a first move or to set out on a course of action: to start paving a street. 4. inaugurate, initiate. -Ant. 1. end.

[Urdang, Laurence, ed. Random House Dictionary of The English Language. New York: Random House, 1968.]




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