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  • Gone With the Wind
    Gone With the Wind
    noun
    a novel (1936) by Margaret Mitchell.
  • gone with the wind
    gone with the wind
    Disappeared, gone forever, as in With these unforeseen expenses, our profits are gone with the wind. This phrase became famous as the title of Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel, which alludes to the Civil War's causing the disappearance of a Southern way of life. It mainly serves as an intensifier of gone.

Gone With the Wind

American  
[wind] / wɪnd /

noun

  1. a novel (1936) by Margaret Mitchell.


Gone With the Wind Cultural  
  1. (1936) A phenomenally popular novel by the American author Margaret Mitchell. Set in Georgia in the period of the Civil War, it tells of the three marriages of the central character, Scarlett O'Hara, and of the devastation caused by the war.


gone with the wind Idioms  
  1. Disappeared, gone forever, as in With these unforeseen expenses, our profits are gone with the wind. This phrase became famous as the title of Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel, which alludes to the Civil War's causing the disappearance of a Southern way of life. It mainly serves as an intensifier of gone.


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The film version of Gone With the Wind, which premiered in 1939, is one of the most successful films ever made.

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The group may still do OK, and some of the individual stocks may even kill it, but the slam-dunk, set-it-and-forget-it, run-circles-around-the-market era of the Mag Seven is gone with the wind.

From Barron's • Mar. 5, 2026

Any pretense of a connection to reality is now gone with the wind.

From Salon • Apr. 20, 2019

Like a kite torn from a toddler's grip, a spider was gone with the wind in seconds.

From Washington Post • Jun. 14, 2018

As it turns out, it doesn’t matter whether he was lying or not, and any conjurer reintegration plan he may have had is likely as gone with the wind as he is.

From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 17, 2015

He is gone with the wind and lightning!

From Voices for the Speechless by Firth, Abraham