Beginning our chapter, we will talk about the lord.
At the beginning of the story, the main character is a young child.
It's early October and the leaves are beginning to change color.
Please think of a word beginning with Z.
Sometimes
when you put the word 'cholera' in the beginning of the sentence, like: Cholera is a disease.
The tumultuous storm was beginning to lose some of its fury
Only Sometimes. In a story you could say "But, mom! Why?".
Yes, but I wouldn't use also at the beginning of a sentence.
Only when it is used at the beginning of the sentence and when it is a proper noun. Examples. Aldrin The Jungle Book
Yes, typically a comma is used after a transition word or phrase at the beginning of a sentence to separate it from the rest of the sentence for clarity.
Never. ANSWER: only if the word is the beginning word in the sentence.
Capitals are used with nouns if they are the first word in a sentence or if they are a proper noun.
The word 'the' is capitalized when it is the first word in a sentence (as the beginning of this sentence) or part of a title ("The Last Supper" or "The Cat In The Hat") . The first word in a sentence or title is always capitalized.
The word 'initiation' is a noun, a word for the start or beginning of something; a word for a ceremony or a ritual to mark someone's entry into a group or an organization.Example sentence: The invention of the telegraph was the initiation of the information age.
It is possible to have a sentence with the word it at the beginning, as this sentence proves.