To go to bed with someone means to have sex with them.
go to it
to tackle a task vigorously
go to law
If you go to law , you go to court in order to get a legal judgment on a dispute .
go to pot
If something goes to pot , it loses all its good qualities because nobody looks after it or works at it.
go to sea
to become a sailor
go to war
If a country goes to war , it starts fighting a war.
way to go
You can say ' Way to go ' to show that you are pleased or impressed by something someone has done.
go back to
If you go back to a task or activity , you start doing it again after you have stopped doing it for a period of time.
go over to
If someone or something goes over to a different way of doing things, they change to it.
go to hell
If you tell someone to go to hell , you are angrily telling them to go away and leave you alone .
go to seed
If vegetable plants go to seed or run to seed , they produce flowers and seeds as well as leaves.
go to town
If you say that someone goes to town on something, you mean that they deal with it with a lot of enthusiasm or intensity .
go to court
to take legal action
go to earth
to hide from someone or something
go to grass
to graze
go to ground
If you go to ground , you hide somewhere where you cannot easily be found.
go to pieces
If you go to pieces , you are so upset or nervous that you lose control of yourself and cannot do what you should do.
go to press
When a newspaper or magazine goes to press , it starts being printed .
go to smash
to become smashed , broken, or ruined
go to waste
If something goes to waste , it remains unused or has to be thrown away .
to go broke
If a company or person goes broke , they lose money and are unable to continue in business or to pay their debts .
to go right
If you say that things are going right , you mean that your life or a situation is developing as you intended or expected and you are pleased with it.
go to blazes!
go to hell !
go to extremes
to be excessive or immoderate in speech or action
to go apeshit
to become crazy , enraged , or out of control
to go to extremes
to overdo things; act excessively
be raring to go
If you say that you are raring to go , you mean that you are very eager to start doing something.
go head-to-head
to compete directly with another person or organization, especially in business and sport
go to any length
to do whatever is necessary ; scruple at nothing
go to bat for
to intervene on behalf of; defend
go to ... expense
If you go to the expense of doing something, you do something which costs a lot of money . If you go to great expense to do something, you spend a lot of money in order to achieve it.
go to one's head
If alcoholic drink goes to your head , it makes you feel drunk.
go to the bad
to become wicked , shiftless , etc.; degenerate
go to the devil
to fail or become dissipated
go to the dogs
if a country, organization, or business is going to the dogs , it is becoming less powerful or successful than it has been in the past
go to the mat
to fight very fiercely about something
go to the pack
to fall into a lower state or condition
go to the toilet
You can say that someone goes to the toilet to mean that they get rid of waste substances from their body, especially when you want to avoid using words that you think may offend people.
go to the wall
If a person or company goes to the wall , they lose all their money and their business fails .
go to your head
if someone lets success go to their head, they start to think that they are better or cleverer than other people, and they begin to behave in an arrogant or silly way
to go belly-up
(of a company) to not have enough money to pay its debts
to go for broke
If you go for broke , you take the most extreme or risky of the possible courses of action in order to try and achieve success .
to go off air
to stop broadcasting
go to the bathroom
People say that they are going to the bathroom when they want to say that they are going to use the toilet .
go to the country
If a head of government or a government goes to the country , they hold a general election.
not to go nap on
to hold in disfavour
something to go on
something that is adequate for the present time
to go a long way
If you say that something goes a long way towards doing a particular thing, you mean that it is an important factor in achieving that thing.
to go blackberrying
to go on an outing to collect blackberries
to go
phrase
If you say that there are a particular number of things to go, you mean that they still remain to be dealt with.
I still had another five operations to go.
See full dictionary entry for go
to go
phrase
If you say that there is a certain amount of time to go, you mean that there is that amount of time left before something happens or ends.
There is a week to go until the elections.
See full dictionary entry for go
to go
phrase
If you are in a café or restaurant and ask for an item of food to go, you mean that you want to take it away with you and not eat it there.
[mainly US]
Large fries to go.
regional note: in BRIT, use to take out, to take away
See full dictionary entry for go
to go in British English
a.
remaining
b. US and Canadian informal
(of food served by a restaurant) for taking away
See full dictionary entry for go
to go in American English
Informal
1. US
to be taken out
said of food in a restaurant
2.
remaining; still to be completed, etc.
one finished, two to go
See full dictionary entry for go
Examples of 'to go' in a sentence
to go
And it gave her fans in the city a chance to go up and say Hello.
The Sun (2016)
I was the first one to go out and say the same thing.
Times, Sunday Times (2016)
GONE are the days when exercising meant having to go make-up free.
The Sun (2016)
I try to ask her a question about marriage, but she says she has to go and get on with her very boring life.
Times, Sunday Times (2017)
The constant nagging from officials to downsize and be more fuel efficient seems to have (ironically ) encouraged motorists to go extra large.
The Sun (2017)
A year ago he accepted a promotion which meant he had to go on a three-month training course 200 miles away.
The Sun (2016)
And at least it's putting two good dancers against each other in the dance off, meaning one has to go while still keeping the fun factor.
The Sun (2016)
But the sheer prevalence of IT brings its own problems, quite apart from the fact that more kit means more things to go wrong.
Computing (2010)
People are spending huge amounts of money to go out.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
That they are not means we have to go to court.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
Sometimes things happen in life that mean you have to go on benefits.
The Sun (2015)
It is meant to go beyond our logic to answer our most basic questions.
Christianity Today (2000)
For them hitting the jackpot simply means being able to go to school.
The Sun (2009)
She then says she has to go find Noel.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
Our scene may not have needed tongues but a laugh from me halfway through the second take meant we had to go again.
The Sun (2015)
Negotiations aren't meant to go that smoothly.
The Sun (2014)
It meant we had already finished the first bottle, which was meant to go with.
Times, Sunday Times (2011)
It doesn't mean you have to go backwards or stop.
Times, Sunday Times (2010)
It doesn't mean you have to go.
Times, Sunday Times (2016)
Having a gap year or trying to find work experience might be possible if that meant being able to go to university next year.
Times, Sunday Times (2009)
That means a lot to go out first and lead the team, put some blue on the board to inspire the others.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
You're not meant to go into clothes cupboards or drawers; hanging rails are provided.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
Note: Things are meant to go right.
Vera Peiffer POSITIVE THINKING: Everything you have always known about positive thinking but wereafraid to put into practice (2001)
We'd won it once in normal time, it just meant we had to go out and win it again.
The Sun (2006)
It might have afforded him some consolation could he have known that Miss Bart had really meant to go to church.
Edith Wharton The House of Mirth (1905)
So he leaves it on, but turns the thermostat down, which means you have to go downstairs to turn it up again.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
After the race I was getting texts and calls saying we had to go to Kempton.
Times, Sunday Times (2011)
EVERY time we buy a second-hand car, there are more electrical components and sensors meaning more to go wrong.