There is a boundary between qualitatively different things A and B when they are continuous on a time axis. At the timing of this boundary, A ends and B begins. Therefore, “it is the end and the beginning” is logically correct, but since humans often recognize the familiar A and not so much the unfamiliar B, the sense that “A has ended” becomes stronger.
Related and more specific
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You feel like things are complete when you’ve succeeded in taking the exam and getting into the school of your choice.
- The entrance exam has been completed, but a new life at the university is about to begin, so it is more appropriate to have “the feeling of completion” rather than “the feeling of completion”.
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You think “it’s over” when the tutorial is over and the main game is about to begin.
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