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单词 go away
释义

go away


go away

vb (intr, adverb) to leave, as when starting from home on holiday
Thesaurus
Verb1.go away - move away from a place into another direction; "Go away before I start to cry"; "The train departs at noon"depart, goshove along, shove off, blow - leave; informal or rude; "shove off!"; "The children shoved along"; "Blow now!"exit, get out, go out, leave - move out of or depart from; "leave the room"; "the fugitive has left the country"
2.go away - go away from a place; "At what time does your train leave?"; "She didn't leave until midnight"; "The ship leaves at midnight"go forth, leavego out - leave the house to go somewhere; "We never went out when our children were small"desert - leave behind; "the students deserted the campus after the end of exam period"take leave, quit, depart - go away or leavepop off - leave quicklywalk away, walk off - go away from; "The actor walked off before he got his cue"; "I got annoyed and just walked off"hightail - leave as fast as possible; "We hightailed it when we saw the police walking in"walk out - leave abruptly, often in protest or anger; "The customer that was not served walked out"come away - leave in a certain condition; "She came away angry"vamoose, decamp, skip - leave suddenly; "She persuaded him to decamp"; "skip town"bugger off, buzz off, scram, fuck off, get - leave immediately; used usually in the imperative form; "Scram!"beetle off, bolt out, run off, run out, bolt - leave suddenly and as if in a hurry; "The listeners bolted when he discussed his strange ideas"; "When she started to tell silly stories, I ran out"ride away, ride off - ride away on a horse, for examplego out - take the field; "The soldiers went out on missions"tarry, linger - leave slowly and hesitantlytake off, start out, set forth, set off, set out, start, depart, part - leave; "The family took off for Florida"pull out, get out - move out or away; "The troops pulled out after the cease-fire"exit, get out, go out, leave - move out of or depart from; "leave the room"; "the fugitive has left the country"rush away, rush off - depart in a hurryfly the coop, head for the hills, hightail it, lam, run away, scarper, scat, take to the woods, turn tail, run, bunk, break away, escape - flee; take to one's heels; cut and run; "If you see this man, run!"; "The burglars escaped before the police showed up"slip away, sneak away, sneak off, sneak out, steal away - leave furtively and stealthily; "The lecture was boring and many students slipped out when the instructor turned towards the blackboard"vacate, abandon, empty - leave behind empty; move out of; "You must vacate your office by tonight"pull up stakes, depart, leave - remove oneself from an association with or participation in; "She wants to leave"; "The teenager left home"; "She left her position with the Red Cross"; "He left the Senate after two terms"; "after 20 years with the same company, she pulled up stakes"
3.go away - become invisible or unnoticeablego away - become invisible or unnoticeable; "The effect vanished when day broke"disappear, vanishdematerialise, dematerialize - become immaterial; disappearclear - go away or disappear; "The fog cleared in the afternoon"bob under - disappear suddenly, as if under the surface of a body of waterend, cease, terminate, finish, stop - have an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical; "the bronchioles terminate in a capillary bed"; "Your rights stop where you infringe upon the rights of other"; "My property ends by the bushes"; "The symphony ends in a pianissimo"
4.go away - get lost, as without warning or explanation; "He disappeared without a trace"disappear, vanishfall away, fall off - diminish in size or intensityfall - go as if by falling; "Grief fell from our hearts"die - disappear or come to an end; "Their anger died"; "My secret will die with me!"go - be abolished or discarded; "These ugly billboards have to go!"; "These luxuries all had to go under the Khmer Rouge"absent, remove - go away or leave; "He absented himself"blow over, evanesce, fleet, fade, pass off, pass - disappear gradually; "The pain eventually passed off"fade, wither - lose freshness, vigor, or vitality; "Her bloom was fading"skip town, take a powder - disappear without notifying anyone (idiom)die off, die out - become extinct; "Dinosaurs died out"desorb - go away from the surface to which (a substance) is adsorbed

go

verb1. To move along a particular course:fare, journey, pass, proceed, push on, remove, travel, wend.Idiom: make one's way.2. To proceed in a specified direction:bear, head, make, set out, strike out.3. To move or proceed away from a place:depart, exit, get away, get off, go away, leave, pull out, quit, retire, run (along), withdraw.Informal: cut out, push off, shove off.Slang: blow, split, take off.Idioms: hit the road, take leave.4. To look to when in need:apply, refer, repair, resort, run, turn.Idioms: fall back on, have recourse to.5. To proceed on a certain course or for a certain distance:carry, extend, lead, reach, run, stretch.6. To change or fluctuate within limits:extend, range, run, vary.7. To perform a function effectively:function, operate, run, take, work.8. To move toward a termination:go away, pass, pass away.9. To have a proper or suitable place:belong, fit.10. To move past in time.Also used with by:elapse, lapse, pass.11. To be depleted:consume, spend.Idiom: go down the drain.12. To fall in:buckle, cave in, collapse, crumple, give.Idiom: give way.13. To cease living:decease, demise, depart, die, drop, expire, pass away, pass (on), perish, succumb.Informal: pop off.Slang: check out, croak, kick in, kick off.Idioms: bite the dust, breathe one's last, cash in, give up the ghost, go to one's grave, kick the bucket, meet one's end, pass on to the Great Beyond, turn up one's toes.14. To do or fare well:boom, flourish, prosper, thrive.Slang: score.Idioms: get somewhere, go great guns, go strong.15. To turn out well:come off, go over, pan out, succeed, work, work out.Slang: click.16. To put up with:abide, accept, bear, brook, endure, stand (for), stomach, suffer, support, sustain, swallow, take, tolerate, withstand.Informal: lump.Idioms: take it, take it lying down.17. Informal. To put up as a stake in a game or speculation:bet, gamble, lay (down), post, put, risk, stake, venture, wager.18. Informal. To make an offer of:bid, offer.phrasal verb
go alongTo agree to cooperate or participate:Informal: play along.phrasal verb
go around1. To pass around but not through:bypass, circumnavigate, circumvent, detour, skirt.2. To become known far and wide:circulate, get around, spread, travel.Idiom: go the rounds.phrasal verb
go at1. To set upon with violent force:aggress, assail, assault, attack, beset, fall on (or upon), have at, sail into, storm, strike.Informal: light into, pitch into.2. To start work on vigorously:attack, sail in, tackle, wade in (or into).Idiom: hop to it.phrasal verb
go away1. To move or proceed away from a place:depart, exit, get away, get off, go, leave, pull out, quit, retire, run (along), withdraw.Informal: cut out, push off, shove off.Slang: blow, split, take off.Idioms: hit the road, take leave.2. To move toward a termination:go, pass, pass away.phrasal verb
go backTo go again to a former place:come back, return, revisit.phrasal verb
go down1. To come to the ground suddenly and involuntarily:drop, fall, nose-dive, pitch, plunge, spill, topple, tumble.Idiom: take a fall.2. To undergo capture, defeat, or ruin:collapse, fall, go under, surrender, topple.phrasal verb
go farTo gain success:arrive, get ahead, get on, rise, succeed.Idioms: go places, make good, make it.phrasal verb
go for1. Informal. To be favorably disposed toward:approve, countenance, favor, hold with.Idiom: take kindly to.2. Informal. To receive pleasure from:enjoy, like, relish, savor.Slang: dig.3. To require a specified price:cost, sell for.phrasal verb
go inTo come or go into (a place):come in, enter, penetrate.Nautical: put in.Idioms: gain entrance, set foot in.phrasal verb
go offTo release or cause to release energy suddenly and violently, especially with a loud noise:blast, blow (up), burst, detonate, explode, fire, fulminate, touch off.phrasal verb
go on1. To be in existence or in a certain state for an indefinitely long time:abide, continue, endure, hold out, last, persist, remain, stay.2. To continue without halting despite difficulties or setbacks:carry on, hang on, keep on, persevere, persist.Idioms: hang in there, keep going , keep it up.3. Informal. To talk volubly, persistently, and usually inconsequentially:babble, blabber, chatter, chitchat, clack, jabber, palaver, prate, prattle, rattle (on), run on.Informal: spiel.Slang: gab, gas, jaw, yak.Idioms: run off at the mouth, shoot the breeze.phrasal verb
go outTo be with another person socially on a regular basis:date, see.Informal: take out.phrasal verb
go over1. To turn out well:come off, go, pan out, succeed, work, work out.Slang: click.2. To look at carefully or critically:check (out), con, examine, inspect, peruse, scrutinize, study, survey, traverse, view.Informal: case.Idiom: give a going-over.3. To give a recapitulation of the salient facts of:abstract, epitomize, recapitulate, review, run down, run through, summarize, sum up, synopsize, wrap up.Informal: recap.phrasal verb
go throughTo participate in or partake of personally:experience, feel, have, know, meet (with), see, suffer, taste (of), undergo.Archaic: prove.Idiom: run up against.phrasal verb
go under1. To undergo capture, defeat, or ruin:collapse, fall, go down, surrender, topple.2. To undergo sudden financial failure:break, bust, collapse, crash, fail.Informal: fold.Idioms: go belly up, go bust, go on the rocks, go to the wall.phrasal verb
go upTo move upward on or along:ascend, climb, mount, scale.phrasal verb
go withTo be in keeping with:become, befit, conform, correspond, fit, match, suit.noun1. A trying to do or make something:attempt, crack, effort, endeavor, essay, offer, stab, trial, try.Informal: shot.Slang: take.Archaic: assay.2. A brief trial:crack, stab, try.Informal: fling, shot, whack, whirl.3. A limited, often assigned period of activity, duty, or opportunity:bout, hitch, inning (often used in plural), shift, spell, stint, stretch, time, tour, trick, turn, watch.4. Informal. Capacity or power for work or vigorous activity:animation, energy, force, might, potency, power, puissance, sprightliness, steam, strength.Informal: get-up-and-go, pep, peppiness, zip.adjectiveInformal. In a state of preparedness:ready, set.Slang: together.Idioms: all set, in working order.
Translations
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go away

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go away


go away

1. To leave or depart. I only went away for a few minutes—how did I miss that key detail in the episode?2. To leave in order to retrieve something. Did Dad go away for the take-out yet? I want to order something else.3. To travel or take a trip. We should go away this summer, maybe to Aruba.4. To stop affecting someone. It took weeks, but my nasty cough has finally gone away.5. To leave someone alone; to stop bothering someone. In this usage, the phrase is often used as an imperative. Go away, Timmy, you're annoying us! I told my little brother to go away, but he keeps coming back and bugging us!See also: away, go

going away

1. Traveling to a different place, usually on a vacation. I'm going away next week, so I'll be out of the office.2. adverb By a large margin. Used to describe winning by a large amount in sports or other competitions. I missed the game last night, but I hear we put up a lot of points and won going away!See also: away, going

go away

 (for something) 1. to leave for a period of time. I have to go away for a week or two. Sharon went away for a few days. 2. to leave in order to get something and bring it back. Excuse me. I have to go away for a soft drink. He went away for a pizza. He'll be right back.See also: away, go

Go away!

Leave me!; Get away from me! Mary: You're such a pest, Sue. Go away! Sue: I was just trying to help. "Go away!" yelled the child at the bee.See also: go

go away

Depart, leave a place, travel somewhere. For example, They went away this morning, or Are you going away this winter? This expression also can be used as an imperative ordering someone to leave: Go away! It can also be used figuratively to mean "disappear," as in This fever just doesn't go away. [c. 1200] See also: away, go

go away

v.1. To leave a place: The pigeons wouldn't go away once the children fed them. Go away and stop bothering me!2. To make an excursion; get away: We went away to the beach for a couple of days. I have to go away on business next week, but I'm available the following Tuesday. It's boring at home—let's go away for the holidays.3. To lose all intensity or diminish in intensity: I took one aspirin and my headache went away. We emptied the garbage can, but the smell still hasn't gone away.See also: away, go
FinancialSeegoing awayAcronymsSeegallium

go away


  • verb

Synonyms for go away

verb move away from a place into another direction

Synonyms

  • depart
  • go

Related Words

  • shove along
  • shove off
  • blow
  • exit
  • get out
  • go out
  • leave

verb go away from a place

Synonyms

  • go forth
  • leave

Related Words

  • go out
  • desert
  • take leave
  • quit
  • depart
  • pop off
  • walk away
  • walk off
  • hightail
  • walk out
  • come away
  • vamoose
  • decamp
  • skip
  • bugger off
  • buzz off
  • scram
  • fuck off
  • get
  • beetle off
  • bolt out
  • run off
  • run out
  • bolt
  • ride away
  • ride off
  • tarry
  • linger
  • take off
  • start out
  • set forth
  • set off
  • set out
  • start
  • part
  • pull out
  • get out
  • exit
  • leave
  • rush away
  • rush off
  • fly the coop
  • head for the hills
  • hightail it
  • lam
  • run away
  • scarper
  • scat
  • take to the woods
  • turn tail
  • run
  • bunk
  • break away
  • escape
  • slip away
  • sneak away
  • sneak off
  • sneak out
  • steal away
  • vacate
  • abandon
  • empty
  • pull up stakes

verb become invisible or unnoticeable

Synonyms

  • disappear
  • vanish

Related Words

  • dematerialise
  • dematerialize
  • clear
  • bob under
  • end
  • cease
  • terminate
  • finish
  • stop

verb get lost, as without warning or explanation

Synonyms

  • disappear
  • vanish

Related Words

  • fall away
  • fall off
  • fall
  • die
  • go
  • absent
  • remove
  • blow over
  • evanesce
  • fleet
  • fade
  • pass off
  • pass
  • wither
  • skip town
  • take a powder
  • die off
  • die out
  • desorb
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更新时间:2025/2/28 5:55:46