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Словарь американских идиом: 8000 единиц
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[go through hell and high water]{v. phr.}, {informal} To go through danger, or trouble. •/John is ready to go through hell and high water to help his chum./ •/The soldiers went through hell and high water to capture the fort./ Compare: COME HELL OR HIGH WATER, THROUGH THE MILL.

[go through the motions]{v. phr.} To pretend to do something by moving or acting as if you were really doing it; do something without really trying hard or caring. •/Jane was angry because she couldn’t go out, and when her mother said to dust her room she just went through the motions./ •/The team was so far behind in the game that they just went through the motions of playing at the end./

[go through with]{v. phr.} To finish; do as planned or agreed; not stop or fail to do. •/The boys don’t think Bob will go through with his plans to spend the summer at a camp./ •/Mr. Trent hopes the city won’t go through with its plans to widen the street./ Syn.: CARRY OUT. Compare: CARRY THROUGH, LIVE UP TO.

[go to]{v.} To be ready to do; start doing something. •/When Jack went to write down the telephone number, he had forgotten it./

[go to any length]{v. phr.} To do everything you can. •/Bill will go to any length to keep Dick from getting a date with Mary./ Compare: ALL-OUT.

[go to bat for]{v. phr.}, {informal} To help out in trouble or need; give aid to. •/Everybody else thought Billy had broken the window, but Tom went to bat for him./ •/Mary went to bat for the new club program./ Syn.: STAND UP FOR.

[go to bed with the chickens]{v. phr.}, {informal} To go to bed early at night. •/On the farm John worked hard and went to bed with the chickens./ •/Mr. Barnes goes to bed with the chickens because he has to get up at 5 A.M./

[go together]{v.} 1. To go with the same boy or girl all the time; date just one person. •/Herbert and Thelma go together./ Compare: GO STEADY, GO WITH(2), KEEP COMPANY. 2. To be suitable or agreeable with each other; match. •/Roast turkey and cranberries go together./ •/Ice cream and cake go together./ •/Green and yellow go together./

[go to great lengths] See: GO TO ANY LENGTH.

[go to hell] See: GO TO THE DEVIL.

[go to it!]{v. phr.} An expression of encouragement meaning go ahead; proceed. •/"Go to it!" my father cried enthusiastically, when I told him I had decided to become a doctor./

[go to one’s head]{v. phr.} 1. To make one dizzy. •/Beer and wine go to a person’s head./ •/Looking out the high window went to the woman’s head./ 2. To make someone too proud; make a person think he is too important. •/Being the star player went to John’s head./ •/The girl’s fame as a movie actress went to her head./

[go to pieces]{v. phr.} To become very nervous or sick from nervousness; become wild. •/Mrs. Vance went to pieces when she heard her daughter was in the hospital./ •/The man went to pieces when the judge said he would have to go to prison for life./ •/Mary goes to pieces when she can’t have her own way./

[go to pot]{v. phr.}, {informal} To be ruined; become bad; be destroyed. •/Mr. Jones' health has gone to pot./ •/The motel business went to pot when the new highway was built./ Compare: GO TO WRACK AND RUIN, GO TO THE DOGS.

[go to prove] See: GO TO SHOW.

[go to seed] or [run to seed]{v. phr.} 1. To grow seeds. •/Onions go to seed in hot weather./ 2. To lose skill or strength; stop being good or useful. •/Sometimes a good athlete runs to seed when he gets too old for sports./ •/Mr. Allen was a good carpenter until he became rich and went to seed./

[go to show] or [go to prove]{v. phr.}, {informal} To seem to prove; act or serve to show (a fact); demonstrate. — Often used after "it". •/Our team beat a bigger team, and it just goes to show you can win if you play hard enough./ •/The hard winter at Valley Forge goes to show that our soldiers suffered a great deal to win the Revolution./

[go to the chair]{v. phr.} To be executed in the electric chair. •/After many stays of execution, the criminal finally had to go to the chair./

[go to the devil]{v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To go away, mind your own business. — Used as a command; considered rude. •/George told Bob to go to the devil./ •/"Go to the devil!" said Jack, when his sister tried to tell him what to do./ 2. To become bad or ruined; become useless. •/The boy got mixed up with bad company and began to steal and rob his friends. He went to the devil./ •/Mr. Jones went to the devil after he lost his business./

[go to the dogs]{v. phr.}, {informal} To go to ruin; to be ruined or destroyed. •/The man went to the dogs after he started drinking./ •/After the death of the owner, the business went to the dogs./ •/The team went to the dogs when its best players got hurt./ Compare: GO TO POT.

[go to the trouble] or [take the trouble]{v. phr.} To make trouble or extra work for yourself; bother. •/John told Mr. Brown not to go to the trouble of driving him home./ •/Since your aunt took the trouble to get you a nice birthday present, the least you can do is to thank her./ Compare: PUT OUT(5).

[go to town]{v. phr.}, {slang} 1. To do something quickly or with great force or energy; work fast or hard. •/The boys went to town on the old garage, and had it torn down before Father came home from work./ •/While Sally was slowly washing the dishes, she remembered she had a date with Pete that evening; then she really went to town./ Compare: IN NO TIME, MAKE TIME. Contrast: TAKE ONE’S TIME. 2. or [go places]. To do a good job; succeed. •/Our team is going to town this year. We have won all five games that we played./ •/Dan was a good student and a good athlete; we expect him to go places in business./

[go to waste]{v. phr.} To be wasted or lost; not used. •/The strawberries went to waste because there was nobody to pick them./ •/Joe’s work on the model automobile went to waste when he dropped it./ Compare: IN VAIN.

[go to wrack and ruin]{v. phr.} To fall apart and be ruined; to become useless. •/The barn went to wrack and ruin after the farmer moved./ •/The car will soon go to wrack and ruin standing out in all kinds of weather./

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