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Discover LudwigThe phrase "starting out from" is correct and is used frequently in written English.
It typically means "beginning with," "originating from," or "based on," and is most commonly used when referring to a point of origin or a point of reference. For example: "Starting out from the base of the mountain, we followed the winding path for several kilometers."
Exact(44)
And if we were starting out from scratch, which convention would be adopted: left or right?
Is it going to rain?" Starting out from his Brooklyn home in the early fifties, he made a movie, "Next Stop, Greenwich Village," about starting out from Brooklyn in the early fifties.
If you're starting out from London or Kent it is quicker, not to say greener, to go by train.
Starting out from said neutral region, a polygonal pattern of maximum area may be situated within the polygonal boundary that delimits the ornamental stone.
Starting out from damage-tolerant oxidic composites with carbon (C -coated fibers, the main part of our investigations was C -coatedted on Nextel 440-fibers/glass mathex comainites.
The film opens with a caravan starting out from Songta to another dam site on the ancient Tea Horse Route along the river.
Similar(16)
The industry started out from scratch.
Brainient started out from a failure.
Balding started out from a position of being incredibly excited.
We had started out from Diamond Beach on Manda island.
"Most of these guys start out from scratch, they start out on the truck," Anthony Caiazzo said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com