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gone "

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    • \ ˈgȯn 

    • \ ˈgō 

    • \ ˈī(-ə)l 

    • \ bə-ˈlün 

    • \ bə-ˈna-nəz \

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    [Adjective]  | "gone" | \ ˈgȯn \


    1: lost, ruined

    2: dead

    3: characterized by sinking or dropping


    Origin: 1598 ;

     From past participle of go;

    [Adjective]  | "ape" 


    1: wildly excited or enthusiastic —usually used in the phrase go ape

    2: showing extreme or uncontrolled anger, aggression, or agitation —usually used in the phrase go ape


    Origin: 1950 ;

    [Adjective]  | "ba*nan*as" | \ bə-ˈna-nəz \


    1: mentally unsound —usually used informally in an exaggerated way

    2: very excited and wild


    Origin: 1957 ;

    [Verb]  | "go" | \ ˈgō \


    1: to move on a course : proceed

    2: to travel to a place

    3: to travel to and stay in a place for a period of time


    Origin: before 12th century ;

     Middle English gon, from Old English gān; akin to Old High German gān to go, Greek kichanein to reach, attain;

    [Idiom]  | "days gone by" 


    1: days/times in the past : bygone days

    [Idiom]  | "far gone" 


    1: in a very bad, weak, or confused condition because of being sick, tired, drunk, etc.

    [Idiom]  | "long gone" 


    1: having ended, died, disappeared, etc., at a distant time in the past

    [Noun]  | "aisle" | \ ˈī(-ə)l \


    1: a passage (as in a theater or railroad passenger car) separating sections of seats

    2: such a passage regarded as separating opposing parties in a legislature

    3: a passage (as in a store or warehouse) for inside traffic


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English ele, eill, ile, ilde "lateral division of a church on either side of the nave, usually divided from the nave by pillars," borrowed from Anglo-French ele, esle, aile, ile "wing, wing of a building, lateral division of a nave" (continental Old French ele "wing, wing of a building"), going back to Latin āla "wing" ;

      * Note : The Middle English forms ile, ilde show assimilation to ile, ilde "island" (see: {isle:1|isle:1})—the rows on either side of the nave perhaps being thought of as isolated from the rest of the church—and effectively supplant ele, eill, etc. in the sixteenth century. The in ilde is a secondary extrusion (compare {mold:3|mold:3}). In early Modern English ile competes orthographically with a variety of other spellings, as ayle/aile, which appears to have regressed to the sense "wing" and adopted the Middle French spelling aile, an etymologizing variant of earlier ele; and isle, which copies the spelling of {isle:1|isle:1}. The now standard spelling aisle looks like a merger of aile and isle. Samuel Johnson enters aisle in his dictionary (1755) with some reluctance: "Thus the word is written by [Joseph] Addison, but perhaps improperly; since it see:ms deducible only from either aile, a wing, or allée, a path; and is therefore to be written aile." As Johnson was likely aware, aisle had developed a broadened sense "passage between pews in the middle of a church" that copies a now out-of-use sense of {alley:1|alley:1}. The still broader extensions "passage between seats in a train, bus or airplane" and "space between rows of items in a department store or supermarket" first appeared in American English.;

    [Noun]  | "bal*loon" | \ bə-ˈlün \


    1: a nonporous bag of light material that can be inflated especially with air or gas: such as

    2: a bag that is filled with heated air or a gas lighter than air so as to rise and float in the atmosphere and that usually carries a suspended load (such as a gondola with passengers)

    3: an inflatable bag (as of rubber or plastic) usually used as a toy or for decoration


    Origin: 1783 ;

     French ballon large football, balloon, from Italian dialect ballone large football, augmentative of balla ball, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German balla ball {mat|ball|};

    [Adjective]  | "gone" 


    1: no longer existing;


      * e.g., " ... woolly mammoths have been long gone "





    2: no longer living;


      * e.g., " ... doctors came to the waiting room to give the sad news that the operation hadn't been successful and the heart patient was gone "





    3: no longer possessed;


      * e.g., " ... I put my watch right here on the table, but now it's gone "





    [Adjective]  | "gone (on)" 


    1: filled with an intense or excessive love for;


      * e.g., " ... I've never seen her so gone on a man before "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "gone" 


    1: to move forward along a course;


      * e.g., " ... everything is going according to our plans "





    2: to leave a place often for another;


      * e.g., " ... will go on vacation at the end of the year "





    3: to be fitting or proper;


      * e.g., " ... at Mardi Gras, just about anything goes "





    [Verb]  | "go" 


    1: to move forward along a course;


      * e.g., " ... everything is going according to our plans "





    2: to leave a place often for another;


      * e.g., " ... will go on vacation at the end of the year "





    3: to be fitting or proper;


      * e.g., " ... at Mardi Gras, just about anything goes "





    [Verb]  | "go (for)" 


    1: to have a price of;


      * e.g., " ... those cars go for $25,000 "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "go (to)" 


    1: to use or seek out as a source of aid, relief, or advantage;


      * e.g., " ... when the sales representative refused to help us, we went to the store manager "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "gone (away)" 


    1: as in disappeared, cleared;




    [Phrase]  | "gone to seed" 


    1: showing signs of advanced wear and tear and neglect;


      * e.g., " ... That old, rusted car has gone to seed. "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "gone" ]

    1: Get out of here. Leave

      * e.g.,  ... Mutha fucka better gone fo I kick yo ass!! 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: To be gone is to be completely high and/or intoxicated to a point of no return. You may experience a loss of short-term memory, a distorted vision of reality, complete confusion of whereabouts, and a possible chance of either being picked up by the nearest authorities or waking up next to a member of the opposite sex that you would normally puke on-sight.

      * e.g.,  ... On Halloween of 2008, I drank two 24-ounce Budweisers, a 24-ounce Bud Lite, popped 3 calotapins, and 2 xanex. My friend smoked a bowl of canadian dro and probably drank some type of alcholic beverage. We, unfortunately, were gone... 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: my dad

      * e.g.,  ... he never came back with the milk he gone lmao 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: (adj) Someone or something which has reached an absolute, final, or perfect stage, usually as a cool, fashionable, good or desirable thing. (Mid-20th century hipster argot; the idea is that the person or thing is so good it has left the party, town, or planet.)

      * e.g.,  ... "Man, she is one gone chick." 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: Drunk beyond recognition of whats wrong or right.

      * e.g.,  ... That guy at the party last night was completely gone. 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: to be dead, altered state of mind or bye

      * e.g.,  ... 1)"he's gone and there's nothing you can do about it!"-John Gotti 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: your dad

      * e.g.,  ... person 1: your dad is gone 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: your dad

      * e.g.,  ... me: wheres you dad at 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: Real cool, as in someone that is in a league all their own.

      * e.g.,  ... "Singin' the blues while the lady cats cry 

     [ "gone" ]

    1: australian term, originating from the footy show, describing someone who dies, gets out in a sport, or does something extremely stupid.

      * e.g.,  ... A) Dazza: oh my god, Bazza died. 

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