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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
starting

start \start\ (st[aum]rt), v. i. [imp. & p. p. started; p. pr. & vb. n. starting.] [OE. sterten; akin to D. storten to hurl, rush, fall, G. st["u]rzen, OHG. sturzen to turn over, to fall, Sw. st["o]rta to cast down, to fall, Dan. styrte, and probably also to E. start a tail; the original sense being, perhaps, to show the tail, to tumble over suddenly.

  1. To leap; to jump. [Obs.]

  2. To move suddenly, as with a spring or leap, from surprise, pain, or other sudden feeling or emotion, or by a voluntary act.

    And maketh him out of his sleep to start.
    --Chaucer.

    I start as from some dreadful dream.
    --Dryden.

    Keep your soul to the work when ready to start aside.
    --I. Watts.

    But if he start, It is the flesh of a corrupted heart.
    --Shak.

  3. To set out; to commence a course, as a race or journey; to begin; as, to start in business.

    At once they start, advancing in a line.
    --Dryden.

    At intervals some bird from out the brakes Starts into voice a moment, then is still.
    --Byron.

  4. To become somewhat displaced or loosened; as, a rivet or a seam may start under strain or pressure.

    To start after, to set out after; to follow; to pursue.

    To start against, to act as a rival candidate against.

    To start for, to be a candidate for, as an office.

    To start up, to rise suddenly, as from a seat or couch; to come suddenly into notice or importance.

Wiktionary
starting

n. The act of something that starts. vb. (present participle of start English)

WordNet
starting
  1. adj. (especially of eyes) bulging or protruding as with fear; "with eyes starting from their sockets"

  2. appropriate to the beginning or start of an event; "the starting point"; "hands in the starting position"

starting

n. a turn to be a starter (in a game at the beginning); "he got his start because one of the regular pitchers was in the hospital"; "his starting meant that the coach thought he was one of their best linemen" [syn: start]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "starting".

Yet, when at last the expected step drew near, she shuddered, trembled, and turned pale with affright, and, starting to her feet, looked this way and that with a wild impulse to flee: then, as the door opened, she dropped into her chair again, and covered her face with her shaking hands.

The French camp is in this crater, stupefied, affrighted, starting up from sleeping,--a funereal swarming.

He wanted to before, but now that someone jumps off the starting high-flier and shouts his name plus his super annuated rank to the ends of the world, the meanwhile alderman and sharpshooter Heinrich Osterhues has lost all inclination and wants only to make himself scarce.

As far as starting another session with Call of Duty, she was too antsy to sit still.

This attack was commenced by the ladies, but it was continued throughout the dinner by the fat-headed old gentleman next the parson with the persevering assiduity of a slow hound, being one of those long-winded jokers who, though rather dull at starting game, are unrivalled for their talents in hunting it down.

Starting from an antipodal position, Kundera shares with Leclerc that sense of hovering at the borderline where a thought or situation, stretched to maximum intensity, teeters on the brink of collapse into the ridiculous or the absurd.

The attendants rather endeavoured to beguile the time, by dexterously starting new topics of conversation, upon which Imogen delivered her plain and natural sentiments with the utmost sincerity, than to detain her by open force.

Cairo, while he waited for his dragoman to give the signal for starting, he found time, in spite of the exactions of that large correspondence which has been more than once mentioned in the course of our narrative, to write Bernard the longest letter he had ever addressed to him.

But even Blitz was starting to worry now about the state of the country he was in.

Had the wind been lighter both sails would probably have been left up and brailed, but even with her muffled main still up the mast, the smuggler was starting to sheer quite wildly in the swell.

I heard a short, sharp cry behind me, a fall, and turning saw an awful face rushing upon me,--not human, not animal, but hellish, brown, seamed with red branching scars, red drops starting out upon it, and the lidless eyes ablaze.

To improve this operation even further, Brewster had redesigned the sluice itself, so that instead of the gate being opened at the channel which diverted water from the stream to the bottom of the wheel, an elevated wooden sluice was constructed, starting a short distance upstream of the keep, which brought water to the top of the wheel-in principle, much like a Roman aqueduct.

A dozen cars wait behind Britt for their chance to establish a lap time that will determine their starting position on Sunday.

I was already starting to loosen my grip on the gun when, incredulously, I saw captain bullen jerk up his colt on the armed man in the doorway.

Putting ,graphite electrodes on either side of a bath of salt water generates sodium hydroxide, which is useful in making good-quality soap and is a basic chemical starting point for thousands of other things.