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    Start
    /stärt/

    verb

    • 1. begin or be reckoned from a particular point in time or space: "the season starts in September" Similar beginget under waygo aheadget goingOpposite finishendclear up
    • 2. (of event or process) happen or come into being: "the fire started in the building's upper floor" Similar come into beingbeginbe borncome into existenceOpposite endclear up

    noun

  2. B1. to begin to happen or to make something begin to happen: The programme starts at seven o'clock. Police believe the fire started in the kitchen. start verb (BUSINESS) B2. If a business, organization, etc starts, it begins to exist, and if you start it, you make it begin to exist: She started her own computer business.

  3. Check pronunciation: start. Definition of start verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  4. The beginning of something is the start. The start of the movie may have been a little slow, but by the end you were on the edge of your seat. As a verb, start means to begin an activity or event.

  5. 3 days ago · 1. transitive verb. If you start to do something, you do something that you were not doing before and you continue doing it. John then unlocked the front door and I started to follow him up the stairs. It was 1956 when Susanna started the work on the garden. Synonyms: set about, begin, proceed, embark upon More Synonyms of start.

  6. start. verb. /stɑrt/. Verb Forms. doing something. [transitive, intransitive] to begin doing or using something start something I start work at nine. He's just started a new job. I only started (= began to read) this book yesterday. We need to start (= begin using) a new can of coffee.

  7. 1. a. To take the first step in doing: We start work at dawn. See Synonyms at begin. b. To cause to come into being; make happen or originate: Bad wiring started the fire. The website started the rumor. c. To set into motion, operation, or activity: start an engine; a shot that started the race.

  8. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Motor vehicles start1 /stɑːt $ stɑːrt/ S1 W1 verb 1 begin doing something [ intransitive, transitive] to do something that you were not doing before, and continue doing it SYN begin There’s so much to do I don’t know where to start.

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