Kazma
What is defferent between "begin" and "start"? What is defferent "begin to~" and "start to~"?
Jul 16, 2010 2:50 PM
Answers · 4
It has already been stated that they are synonyms, so they have the same meaning and can be used interchangeably. The only difference is that "start" is used much more commonly and casually than "begin". In casual conversation I almost always use "start" instead of "begin".
June 3, 2016
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July 16, 2010
Begin and start are synonyms - they have the same meaning. 'Begin to' and 'start to' are also synonyms. That is what sara was saying when she used equals (=) - they are equal in meaning (she could have been a little clearer). Start has additional, less common meanings which are different than begin. For example, to 'start' can mean to 'move suddenly' - "He started when he heard the thunder" - means he jerked/convulsed/moved suddenly. But for the most common meaning, begin and start mean the same thing.
July 16, 2010
begin =\START ,TO=TO ,BEGIN TO=\START TO
July 16, 2010
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