No, I think it's just "Start up". It may be used with a hyphen but not usually.
Maybe start with learning to use spell check.
Easy, with $500 million in start up.
He started belching up slugs.
There is no 'typical' amount that one can count on if one sells a start up company. The amount one would receive would depend entirely on the size of the company, the product sold, the profitability of the company, ect.
company
Inventory at start-up is a capital contribution of the owners, actual costs, not market values.
You spell it imagine. Not with an e at the start.
go on the Internet, and start up a company or make leaflets and hand them out, post them through letters boxes and mention it to a friend
You probably first need to get a substantial investment from someone. Lenders would want enough capitall in the company already to get the company through its expected start-up period.
That is correct. Company is the singular noun, and company's is the singular possessive.
You can start by learning how to spell "you".