To create suspense for the reader. And it will also make the reader want to read on
Sure, I can use "so" at the beginning of a sentence.
no
no
Deliberately.
yes
You can do whatever you want Ellipsis is a noun so you can use it at the beginning of a sentence. A ellipsis is often indicated by a set of dots.
In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the Earth.
It's actually notwithstanding, (and not notwothstanding). Anyway, yes, you can use it at the beginning of a sentence.
No you can not because you are making a list and so what the topic is who use what happened the most and trun it into a sentence.
Usually at the beginning, for example: Contrary to popular belief, the word contrary is used at the beginning of the sentence in which it is used.
No, because it is never good to start a sentence with the word "but".
Yes. There is no word or phrase in English that cannot begin or end a sentence.