[begin] f. başlamak, girişmek, koyulmak, başlatmak, meydana gelmek, doğmak, önayak olmak
You, including some behavior scientists, have begun to make me believe that we've all been putting too much emphasis on environment and too little on heredity.
Sen, bazı davranış bilimcileri dahil, hepimizin çevreye çok fazla ve kalıtıma çok az önem vermekte olduğumuza beni inandırmaya başladınız.
He looked at me and said, My friend John, when the corn is grown, even before it has ripened, while the milk of its mother earth is in him, and the sunshine has not yet begun to paint him with his gold, the husbandman he pull the ear and rub him between his rough hands, and blow away the green chaff, and say to you, 'Look! He's good corn, he will make a good crop when the time comes.'
O bana baktı ve Arkadaşım John,buğday yetiştiğinde,hatta olgunlaşmadan önce,annesinin sütü toprak onun içindeyken ve güneş ışını onu henüz altın rengine boyamadan dedi,çiftçi başağı çeker ve onu kaba ellerinin arasında ovar ve yeşil samanı üfler ve sana 'Bak o iyi bir buğday,zamanı geldiğinde iyi bir ürün verecek' der..
Americans in all places and levels of government have begun to consider the areas where we need to prepare ourselves from future threats, including the latest weapon: bio-terror. Paul Gillmor
Other composers have taken this particular technique much further than I in the meantime, with the result that the Law of Diminishing Returns has begun to apply. Brian Ferneyhough
Seven flung down his brush, and had just begun 'Well, of all the unjust things-' when his eye chanced to fall upon Alice, as she stood watching them, and he checked himself suddenly: the others looked round also, and all of them bowed low.
The labor of keeping house is labor in its most naked state, for labor is toil that never finishes, toil that has to be begun again the moment it is completed, toil that is destroyed and consumed by the life process. Mary McCarthy
Although by 1851 tales of adventure had begun to seem antiquated, they had rendered a large service to the course of literature: they had removed the stigma, for the most part, from the word novel. Carl Clinton Van Doren
She saw too that man has the power of exceeding himself, of becoming himself more entirely and profoundly than he is, truths which have only recently begun to be seen in Europe and seem even now too great for its common intelligence.
Sri Aurobindo
Washington should revive international efforts begun during the Clinton administration to pressure countries with dangerously loose banking regulations to adopt and enforce stricter rules. Kit Bond