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gone
/ ɡɒn /
verb
the past participle of go 1
adjective
ended; past
lost; ruined (esp in the phrases gone goose or gosling )
dead or near to death
spent; consumed; used up
informal, faint or weak
informal, having been pregnant (for a specified time)
six months gone
slang, (usually foll by on) in love (with)
slang, in an exhilarated state, as through music or the use of drugs
informal, blank and without comprehension, as if stupefied in surprise
adverb
past
it's gone midnight
Word History and Origins
Origin of gone1
Idioms and Phrases
far gone,
much advanced; deeply involved.
nearly exhausted; almost worn out.
dying.
The rescue party finally reached the scene of the crash, but most of the survivors were already far gone.
gone on, infatuated with; in love with.
He is still gone on the woman who jilted him.
More idioms and phrases containing gone
- a goner
- all gone
- dead and buried (gone)
- far gone
- going, going, gone
- here today, gone tomorrow
- to hell and gone
Example Sentences
But when he returned, it was with us, the family he made, the proof that while he was gone, he didn’t just survive, but lived.
"Had we allowed the fans and it had gone wrong I feel that I would be sitting here again anyway."
Mr Male said that in the past few years, the competition has "gone nuts" and is "probably the most exciting way to get better at excel in general".
It’s how the sport has gone ruthlessly pro—but people still act like it’s some folksy campus endeavor when it suits their motives.
By Sunday evening, the donation booths were gone, replaced by police command tents.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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