If you, at the beginning of such a question, put your why and verb at the end, then your question would look like this: Why at the beginning a verb in question do you have to put?
To change a declarative sentence into a question, you can typically add a question word (who, what, when, where, why, how) at the beginning of the sentence, invert the subject and the verb, or add a question mark at the end.
A question beginning with the interrogative pronoun 'when' would be unusual but possible, for example: When will you be gone? I will be away the first week of June. The verb 'away' would be more appropriate but 'gone' is not incorrect.
indeed it is. It can be a noun, "in the beginning", but generally it's used as a verb.
No, it is a beginning
I think you put the subject In Front of the verb.... I think.....
The future tense! However the question should have been preceded by a comma and put in inverted commas ending with a question mark! There should be no question mark in this sentence this is not a question.
to begin
No, it is not. The word beginning is the present participle of the verb to begin, and may be a verb, an adjective, or a noun (gerund).
No, the word 'begins' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to begin (an action verb).The noun form of the verb to begin is the gerund 'beginning'.Examples:Jack begins school on Monday. (verb)Please start from the beginning. (noun)
No, they don't. I think maybe they do that in Spanish.
Put the word ma at the beginning, e.g (Ma ismak?)
you put an upside down question mark in the beginning and then a regular question mark at the end. Example: ¿Donde esta? The way to do a updside down question mark when typing is: SHIFT+CTRL+ALT+?