go along
— phrasal verb with go uk/ɡəʊ/us/ɡoʊ/verb present participle going, past tense went, past participle gone
(PLACE)
UK to go to a place or event, usually without much planning:
I might go along to the party later.
More examples
- When are you planning to go along to the exhibition?
- He went along to the meeting with no expectations.
- There's nothing to stop you from going along as well.
- My husband is speaking at the dinner and I'm just going along for the ride.
- They hold free lunchtime concerts that I try to go along to.
Thesaurus: synonyms and related words
Present
- all over somewhere idiom
- anywhere
- appearance
- attendance
- attendant
- be in at the kill idiom
- front
- immanent
- in the flesh idiom
- kick
- kick around
- kill
- knock
- presence
- present
- sit
- sit in
- sit through sth
- synchronic
- to sb's face idiom
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(ACTIVITY)
as you go along
as you are doing a job or activity:
We have a flexible approach to what we're doing that allows us to make any necessary changes as we go along.
I'll explain the rules as we go along.
Thesaurus: synonyms and related words
Simultaneous and consecutive
- accompany
- all the while idiom
- along
- along the way idiom
- alternate
- go
- in tandem idiom
- in the process idiom
- live
- no sooner ... than idiom
- once
- one after another idiom
- over
- synchronous
- tandem
- the minute (that) idiom
- through
- throughout
- together
- under
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