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, 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+?
The word 'beginning' is a verb, the present participle, present tense of the verb to begin.The present participle of a verb can also function as an adjective and a gerund (a verbal noun).Examples:Junior is beginning his first year of college. (verb)The beginning chapter of the book sets up the mystery. (adjective)Geometry seemed very confusing in the beginning. (noun)