fought
beginning
No. The word begin is a verb. "Begin" has three consonant letters and two vowels.
N'Sync
began
Alliteration
Umbrella and underwater...
Began is a verb. It is the past tense of begin.
To begin is a verb. The word that follow it denotes action.
it began when the world was created when life began
The word "began" is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "begin," which means to start or initiate something.
"Began" is a verb. It is the past tense of "begin".
began start/ing
the present tense is ' begin"
The word is spelled begin, just as you spelled it. The variants are: begin began begun
WW2 began with Hitler's armies invading Poland.
Began is the simple form of the preterite tense of the verb to begin. I began, you began, he, she began, we began, and they began. A noun is a word for a person, place, or thing. Example: The movie began at eight. (The common noun movie is the subject of the sentence, the verb is began.)
It's an irregular verb: Begin / Began / Begun I begin work every day at 9 in the morning. I began work yesterday a little later than normal. I've just begun the class. Please take a seat.
The word began is the past tense for the verb to begin. There is an adjective (the past participle begun) but no adverb form. The verb began can be modified by adverbs such as slowly, suddenly, abruptly, or inauspiciously.