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单词 to go with
释义

> as lemmas

to go with ——
to go with ——
1. intransitive.
a. To accompany (a person or group), attend as a companion. In later use also (colloquial): to be regularly in company with; to be friends with.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > courtship or wooing > court or woo [verb (transitive)] > keep company with as a lover
to go with ——c1330
to go rounda1867
trot1888
to go around1904
track1916
society > travel > aspects of travel > guidance in travel > show (the way) [verb (transitive)] > accompany as a guide > accompany or attend as companion
to go with ——c1330
convoyc1405
to wait on or upon ——1450
squire1530
to wait of ——?1551
escort1746
the world > relative properties > relationship > accompaniment > accompany or attend [verb (transitive)]
followeOE
to be with1382
to stand with ——1384
fellowship?c1400
fellow1434
encompanya1513
to go with ——1523
to come with ——1533
accompany1543
associate1548
affellowship1559
to wait on ——1579
concomitate1604
second1609
companion1622
comitate1632
attend1653
waita1674
to keep (a person) company1849
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 3633 We beþ redi in al þing Anon to go wiþ king Arthour To his manschipe and his honour.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) I. 127 Madame..ye shall go with me, for I may nat longe mysse you.
1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. ccxcvi. 439 Ye shall be souerayne and gouernour..of all theym that gothe with you.
1603 Philotus xcv. sig. D3 Ȝe sall ga with me hame.
1680 Tryal & Sentence E. Cellier 38 On Thursday last she went with her Husband to Mrs. Cellier's House.
1707 C. Cibber Comical Lovers iii. 29 She went to take the Air, chose out two Ladies to go with her, that came in after me, and left me most barbarously behind her.
1799 Edinb. Mag. July 77/2 They went away on the Friday morning, and her master went with them.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 544 It was determined that..Fletcher should go with Monmouth to England.
1879 F. R. Stockton Rudder Grange i. 4 Euphemia sometimes went with me on my expeditions to real-estate offices.
1906 U. Sinclair Jungle xxvi. 315 He went with a new set now, young unmarried fellows who were ‘sporty’.
1940 Railroad Mag. Apr. 10/1 Margery..went with him to the office.
1997 E. White Farewell Symphony (1998) viii. 343 One afternoon Giovanni wanted me to go with him to a kung-fu movie.
b. colloquial. To have a romantic or sexual relationship with; to have sexual intercourse with.
ΚΠ
?1834 Those London Mots in Bang-up Songster! 39 If you can sport a bob or two, Those London mots will go with you.
?1889 ‘C. Deveureux’ Vénus in India II. 124 I'll go with you, but if your friend likes I'll go to him, or he can come to me when you are done.
1892 Harper's Mag. May 932/1 The ‘young ladies’ he had ‘gone with’ and ‘had feelin's about’ were now staid matrons.
1925 J. Dos Passos Manhattan Transfer iv. 94 Ain't a Bowery broad would go wid yer, ye little Yap.
1970 R. Thorp & R. Blake Music of their Laughter 39/2 I've been going with one boy for about a year, but now we're just dating. It used to be steady.
2008 R. Moore & G. Owen My Word is my Bond (2009) xiii. 340 She now lived on the streets and went with men..to earn a little money.
2. intransitive.
a. To side with, favour; to agree with. †Also of a victory, outcome, etc.: to fall to, be the lot of (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or backing > support, side with, or back [verb (transitive)]
werea1300
to be abouta1400
support?a1439
to go with ——a1475
outbear1530
follow1548
subscribe1560
second1596
suffrage1614
to wait on ——1639
subjoin1810
suffrage1838
a1475 J. Fortescue Governance of Eng. (Laud) (1885) 129 The peple will go with hym þat best mey susteyne and rewarde ham.
1567 J. Jewel Def. Apol. Churche Eng. v. xvi. 591 Thei..wil foresake their owne selues, and ioine of theire owne accorde to our side, to goe with vs.
1583 A. Golding tr. J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie ix. 375/1 They shall make their triumphes aforehande, but the victorie shall goe with vs, if wee haue God for our defence.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) v. vi. 76 The day Was yours by accident: had it gone with vs, We should not [etc.] . View more context for this quotation
1658 R. Baxter Certain Disputations Right to Sacraments (new ed.) 195 Here I must confess my self in as great an admiration at the words and dealings of Mr. Blake and some godly learned Divines that go with him in this Cause, as ever I was brought to by the groundless confidence of such men.
1780 Parl. Reg. 1775–80 XVI. 181 Should the committee go with him in this opinion, he meant to include the glass in the wool export bill.
1886 Athenæum 7 Aug. 169/3 We cannot go with him in defending the MS. ‘tibi’..as an ethical dative.
1892 Cornhill Mag. July 47 My sympathies went strongly with the lady.
1914 J. Oxenham Red Wrath x. 69 It's one thing to hate a man to the point of wishing him gone, but it's quite another thing to help him off. I can't go with you there.
1989 J. Grisham Time to Kill xlii. 401 Poor old Eula Dell Yates had cried one way, then cried the other, and everyone knew she would eventually go with the majority.
2013 R. B. Ness Genius Unmasked vi. 62 About one-third of the time, the actual subject went against his own judgment and went with the opinion of the majority.
b. Originally North American. To opt for, choose (a particular option). Cf. to go for —— 4 at Phrasal verbs 2.
ΚΠ
1955 Mich. Alumnus 8 Oct. 6/2 Though he could have brought back the starters, Oosterbaan chose to go with this lineup.
1985 New Yorker 5 Aug. 26/2 For dinner I decide to go with chicken.
2007 Wired Jan. 119 If you can't bear the appearance of those big black roof slabs, go with building-integrated photovoltaics.
3. intransitive. To be a concomitant of, be associated with, go together with; to be seen as an accompaniment of; to be included with.See also to go with the territory at territory n.1 Phrases.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > be part of something [verb (intransitive)]
belonga1393
to go with ——1567
blonks1871
1567 T. Harding Reioindre to M. Iewels Replie against Masse Pref. f. 10 When a new Lawe tooke place, Sacrifice propre to that Lawe should go with it.
a1602 W. Perkins Godlie & Learned Expos. Epist. Iude (1606) 8/1 Iustification goes with sanctification, though iustification be before in nature, yet they are wrought at the same time.
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) i. i. 40 For where an vncleane mind carries vertuous qualities, the commendations go with pitty. View more context for this quotation
a1770 J. Jortin Serm. (1771) IV. i. 6 Poverty and riches are of themselves things indifferent; and the blessing of God may go with them both.
1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 76/1 Hereditary wealth, and the rank which goes with it, are too much idolized by creeping sycophants. View more context for this quotation
1845 N. P. Willis Dashes at Life with Free Pencil iii. 60 May I ask what fortune goes with the hand of Lady Angelica.
1873 H. Spencer Study Sociol. xv. 361 Criminality habitually went with dirtiness.
1928 Boys' Life Mar. 4 That's only part of the fun that goes with the..week-end hike.
1948 ‘R. Crompton’ Family Roundabout xiii. 137 Mrs. Richmond, the woman from the village who ‘went with’ the cottage, was in the kitchen.
1988 N. L. Schwartz Blue Guitar vi. 94 One might argue..that it is precisely individual freedom that goes with the idea of state sovereignty.
2006 Scots Mag. June 592/1 I meet constant enthusiasm, tempered with the down-to-earthness that goes with being an islander.
4. intransitive. To match; to be a partner or complement to; to harmonize with. Frequently with adverb complement, as beautifully, well. Cf. sense 46c.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree, harmonize, or be congruous with [verb (transitive)] > go with or match
to fall in1577
to go with ——1710
match1722
assort1800
neighbour1820
1710 J. Addison Tatler No. 157 A Dulcimer..goes very well with the Flute.
1853 C. Dickens Bleak House xl. 400 The innocence which would go extremely well with a sash and tucker, is a little out of keeping with the rouge and pearl necklace.
1893 Cornhill Mag. July 93 A delightful baritone, which ‘went’ beautifully with her own soprano.
1963 Life 18 Oct. 25/3 I have..several cotton kerchiefs in flowered patterns that ‘go nicely’ with my yellow or salmon slacks for shopping downtown.
1976 R. Massey When I was Young iv. 39 Father had gone out on his own and bought one of the new white waistcoats to go with the swallowtails.
2003 Diva Aug. 66/1 The local delicacy is laverbread, a type of seaweed, which goes well with bacon and cockles.
5. intransitive. To understand, follow (an idea, person, etc.). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > understand [verb (transitive)] > keep up with
follow1667
to go with ——1873
to keep track1883
to be with1900
1873 E. Bulwer-Lytton Kenelm Chillingly I. ii. xiii. 281 ‘Do you go with me?’ ‘Partly, sir; but I'm puzzled a little still.’
1891 Law Times 90 462/1 The Court declared the deed a nullity on the ground that the mind of the mortgagee did not go with the deed she signed.
6. intransitive. to go with it: to accept the current situation or state of things; to make the best of an unexpected or undesirable state of affairs. Often as an exhortation to do this, as just go with it!. Cf. to go with the flow at flow n.1 Additions.
ΚΠ
1959 S. Lamkin Comes a Day i. ii. 32 If I'm what you want, don't be scared of it. Go with it, baby, go with it!
1963 J. P. Donleavy Singular Man 305 Don't fight it. Go with it. Till there's a chance to go elsewhere.
1990 J. Handly et al. Why Women Worry ii. vii. 92 Rather than battling their fate, they went with it, and in some cases, their bodies reacted positively too.
2002 S. Stacey & J. Fairley 21st Cent. Beauty Bible 191/1 If your hair is dirty or greasy, just go with it.
2006 P. Williams Rise & Fall Yummy Mummy xii. 101 It's such an odd situation that the only way to deal with it is to go with it.
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