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start out

VERB
  1. take the first step or steps in carrying out an action
    We began working at dawn
    Let's get down to work now
    The first tourists began to arrive in Cambodia
    He began early in the day
    Get working as soon as the sun rises!
    Who will start?
  2. leave
    The family took off for Florida

How To Use start out In A Sentence

  • Did he personally start out as the rest of mortal mankind, and cross some intellectual rubicon? Political Beliefs and Self-Deception, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • If they happen to a nondrinker, you have to at least assume they're going to start out thinking the absolute worst about you. Ana-ng Diary Entry
  • One of the reasons women want to start out in luxury is the fear of having to have inferior quality of goods or a less comforts. Living On One Income
  • Plan your trip allowing for short breaks and start out fresh by getting enough sleep in the week leading up to your trip.
  • And you know that he can be motivated by money or other inducements - which means that you start out discounting whatever he's about to tell you.
  • More than a few antiques dealers start out as indefatigable collectors who make the decision to turn their avocation into a vocation.
  • We don't need to do big things—we can start out small.
  • The quarrel only served to strengthen my resolve to start out on my own.
  • Like computer programming, the brain is a bioenergetic collection of electro-chemically interacting structures which start out with certain known and/or instinctive/inherited information, then evolve layering BIOBOOLEAN Zeros and Ones atop each subsequent layer until patterns, subroutines, routines, and programmes are created. Mind Hacks: NPR on brain scan lie detection
  • For the biceps, start out with a major massbuilding exercise like barbell curls.
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