| | slovo | definícia |  | go to (mass)
 | go to - navštíviť
 |  | go to (encz)
 | go to,navštívit	v:		Zdeněk Brož |  | go to (encz)
 | go to,odebrat se			Zdeněk Brož |  | Go to (gcide)
 | Go \Go\, v. i. [imp. Went (w[e^]nt); p. p. Gone (g[o^]n; 115); p. pr. & vb. n. Going. Went comes from the AS,
 wendan. See Wend, v. i.] [OE. gan, gon, AS. g[=a]n, akin to
 D. gaan, G. gehn, gehen, OHG. g[=e]n, g[=a]n, SW. g[*a], Dan.
 gaae; cf. Gr. kicha`nai to reach, overtake, Skr. h[=a] to go,
 AS. gangan, and E. gang. The past tense in AS., eode, is from
 the root i to go, as is also Goth. iddja went. [root]47a. Cf.
 Gang, v. i., Wend.]
 1. To pass from one place to another; to be in motion; to be
 in a state not motionless or at rest; to proceed; to
 advance; to make progress; -- used, in various
 applications, of the movement of both animate and
 inanimate beings, by whatever means, and also of the
 movements of the mind; also figuratively applied.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. To move upon the feet, or step by step; to walk; also, to
 walk step by step, or leisurely.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In old writers go is much used as opposed to run, or
 ride. "Whereso I go or ride." --Chaucer.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 You know that love
 Will creep in service where it can not go.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Thou must run to him; for thou hast staid so long
 that going will scarce serve the turn. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He fell from running to going, and from going to
 clambering upon his hands and his knees.
 --Bunyan.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In Chaucer go is used frequently with the pronoun in
 the objective used reflexively; as, he goeth him home.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. To be passed on fron one to another; to pass; to
 circulate; hence, with for, to have currency; to be taken,
 accepted, or regarded.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The man went among men for an old man in the days of
 Saul.                                 --1 Sa. xvii.
 12.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 [The money] should go according to its true value.
 --Locke.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. To proceed or happen in a given manner; to fare; to move
 on or be carried on; to have course; to come to an issue
 or result; to succeed; to turn out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 How goes the night, boy ?             --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I think, as the world goes, he was a good sort of
 man enough.                           --Arbuthnot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Whether the cause goes for me or against me, you
 must pay me the reward.               --I Watts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. To proceed or tend toward a result, consequence, or
 product; to tend; to conduce; to be an ingredient; to
 avail; to apply; to contribute; -- often with the
 infinitive; as, this goes to show.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Against right reason all your counsels go. --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To master the foul flend there goeth some complement
 knowledge of theology.                --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. To apply one's self; to set one's self; to undertake.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Seeing himself confronted by so many, like a
 resolute orator, he went not to denial, but to
 justify his cruel falsehood.          --Sir P.
 Sidney.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go, in this sense, is often used in the present
 participle with the auxiliary verb to be, before an
 infinitive, to express a future of intention, or to
 denote design; as, I was going to say; I am going to
 begin harvest.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. To proceed by a mental operation; to pass in mind or by an
 act of the memory or imagination; -- generally with over
 or through.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By going over all these particulars, you may receive
 some tolerable satisfaction about this great
 subject.                              --South.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. To be with young; to be pregnant; to gestate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The fruit she goes with,
 I pray for heartily, that it may find
 Good time, and live.                  --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. To move from the person speaking, or from the point whence
 the action is contemplated; to pass away; to leave; to
 depart; -- in opposition to stay and come.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I will let you go, that ye may sacrifice to the Lord
 your God; . . . only ye shall not go very far away.
 --Ex. viii.
 28.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 10. To pass away; to depart forever; to be lost or ruined; to
 perish; to decline; to decease; to die.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By Saint George, he's gone!
 That spear wound hath our master sped. --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 11. To reach; to extend; to lead; as, a line goes across the
 street; his land goes to the river; this road goes to New
 York.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 His amorous expressions go no further than virtue
 may allow.                           --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 12. To have recourse; to resort; as, to go to law.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go is used, in combination with many prepositions and
 adverbs, to denote motion of the kind indicated by the
 preposition or adverb, in which, and not in the verb,
 lies the principal force of the expression; as, to go
 against to go into, to go out, to go aside, to go
 astray, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Go to, come; move; go away; -- a phrase of exclamation,
 serious or ironical.
 
 To go a-begging, not to be in demand; to be undesired.
 
 To go about.
 (a) To set about; to enter upon a scheme of action; to
 undertake. "They went about to slay him." --Acts ix.
 29.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 They never go about . . . to hide or palliate
 their vices.                     --Swift.
 (b) (Naut.) To tack; to turn the head of a ship; to wear.
 
 
 To go abraod.
 (a) To go to a foreign country.
 (b) To go out of doors.
 (c) To become public; to be published or disclosed; to be
 current.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Then went this saying abroad among the
 brethren.                        --John xxi.
 23.
 
 To go against.
 (a) To march against; to attack.
 (b) To be in opposition to; to be disagreeable to.
 
 To go ahead.
 (a) To go in advance.
 (b) To go on; to make progress; to proceed.
 
 To go and come. See To come and go, under Come.
 
 To go aside.
 (a) To withdraw; to retire.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He . . . went aside privately into a desert
 place.                           --Luke. ix.
 10.
 (b) To go from what is right; to err. --Num. v. 29.
 
 To go back on.
 (a) To retrace (one's path or footsteps).
 (b) To abandon; to turn against; to betray. [Slang, U.
 S.]
 
 To go below
 (Naut), to go below deck.
 
 To go between, to interpose or mediate between; to be a
 secret agent between parties; in a bad sense, to pander.
 
 
 To go beyond. See under Beyond.
 
 To go by, to pass away unnoticed; to omit.
 
 To go by the board (Naut.), to fall or be carried
 overboard; as, the mast went by the board.
 
 To go down.
 (a) To descend.
 (b) To go below the horizon; as, the sun has gone down.
 (c) To sink; to founder; -- said of ships, etc.
 (d) To be swallowed; -- used literally or figuratively.
 [Colloq.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Nothing so ridiculous, . . . but it goes down
 whole with him for truth.        --L' Estrange.
 
 To go far.
 (a) To go to a distance.
 (b) To have much weight or influence.
 
 To go for.
 (a) To go in quest of.
 (b) To represent; to pass for.
 (c) To favor; to advocate.
 (d) To attack; to assault. [Low]
 (e) To sell for; to be parted with for (a price).
 
 To go for nothing, to be parted with for no compensation or
 result; to have no value, efficacy, or influence; to count
 for nothing.
 
 To go forth.
 (a) To depart from a place.
 (b) To be divulged or made generally known; to emanate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The law shall go forth of Zion, and the word of
 the Lord from Jerusalem.         --Micah iv. 2.
 
 To go hard with, to trouble, pain, or endanger.
 
 To go in, to engage in; to take part. [Colloq.]
 
 To go in and out, to do the business of life; to live; to
 have free access. --John x. 9.
 
 To go in for. [Colloq.]
 (a) To go for; to favor or advocate (a candidate, a
 measure, etc.).
 (b) To seek to acquire or attain to (wealth, honor,
 preferment, etc.)
 (c) To complete for (a reward, election, etc.).
 (d) To make the object of one's labors, studies, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He was as ready to go in for statistics as for
 anything else.                   --Dickens.
 
 
 To go in to or To go in unto.
 (a) To enter the presence of. --Esther iv. 16.
 (b) To have sexual intercourse with. [Script.]
 
 To go into.
 (a) To speak of, investigate, or discuss (a question,
 subject, etc.).
 (b) To participate in (a war, a business, etc.).
 
 To go large.
 (Naut) See under Large.
 
 To go off.
 (a) To go away; to depart.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The leaders . . . will not go off until they
 hear you.                        --Shak.
 (b) To cease; to intermit; as, this sickness went off.
 (c) To die. --Shak.
 (d) To explode or be discharged; -- said of gunpowder, of
 a gun, a mine, etc.
 (e) To find a purchaser; to be sold or disposed of.
 (f) To pass off; to take place; to be accomplished.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The wedding went off much as such affairs do.
 --Mrs.
 Caskell.
 
 To go on.
 (a) To proceed; to advance further; to continue; as, to
 go on reading.
 (b) To be put or drawn on; to fit over; as, the coat will
 not go on.
 
 To go all fours, to correspond exactly, point for point.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 It is not easy to make a simile go on all fours.
 --Macaulay.
 
 To go out.
 (a) To issue forth from a place.
 (b) To go abroad; to make an excursion or expedition.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 There are other men fitter to go out than I.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 What went ye out for to see ?    --Matt. xi. 7,
 8, 9.
 (c) To become diffused, divulged, or spread abroad, as
 news, fame etc.
 (d) To expire; to die; to cease; to come to an end; as,
 the light has gone out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Life itself goes out at thy displeasure.
 --Addison.
 
 To go over.
 (a) To traverse; to cross, as a river, boundary, etc.; to
 change sides.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I must not go over Jordan.       --Deut. iv.
 22.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Let me go over, and see the good land that is
 beyond Jordan.                   --Deut. iii.
 25.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Ishmael . . . departed to go over to the
 Ammonites.                       --Jer. xli.
 10.
 (b) To read, or study; to examine; to review; as, to go
 over one's accounts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 If we go over the laws of Christianity, we
 shall find that . . . they enjoin the same
 thing.                           --Tillotson.
 (c) To transcend; to surpass.
 (d) To be postponed; as, the bill went over for the
 session.
 (e) (Chem.) To be converted (into a specified substance
 or material); as, monoclinic sulphur goes over into
 orthorhombic, by standing; sucrose goes over into
 dextrose and levulose.
 
 To go through.
 (a) To accomplish; as, to go through a work.
 (b) To suffer; to endure to the end; as, to go through a
 surgical operation or a tedious illness.
 (c) To spend completely; to exhaust, as a fortune.
 (d) To strip or despoil (one) of his property. [Slang]
 (e) To botch or bungle a business. [Scot.]
 
 To go through with, to perform, as a calculation, to the
 end; to complete.
 
 To go to ground.
 (a) To escape into a hole; -- said of a hunted fox.
 (b) To fall in battle.
 
 To go to naught (Colloq.), to prove abortive, or
 unavailling.
 
 To go under.
 (a) To set; -- said of the sun.
 (b) To be known or recognized by (a name, title, etc.).
 (c) To be overwhelmed, submerged, or defeated; to perish;
 to succumb.
 
 To go up, to come to nothing; to prove abortive; to fail.
 [Slang]
 
 To go upon, to act upon, as a foundation or hypothesis.
 
 To go with.
 (a) To accompany.
 (b) To coincide or agree with.
 (c) To suit; to harmonize with.
 
 To go well with, To go ill with, To go hard with, to
 affect (one) in such manner.
 
 To go without, to be, or to remain, destitute of.
 
 To go wrong.
 (a) To take a wrong road or direction; to wander or
 stray.
 (b) To depart from virtue.
 (c) To happen unfortunately; to unexpectedly cause a
 mishap or failure.
 (d) To miss success; to fail.
 
 To let go, to allow to depart; to quit one's hold; to
 release.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | go to (wn)
 | go to v 1: be present at (meetings, church services, university),
 etc.; "She attends class regularly"; "I rarely attend
 services at my church"; "did you go to the meeting?" [syn:
 attend, go to] [ant: miss]
 | 
 | | podobné slovo | definícia |  | go to (mass)
 | go to - navštíviť
 |  | go to sleep (mass)
 | go to sleep - zaspať
 |  | go to (encz)
 | go to,navštívit	v:		Zdeněk Brožgo to,odebrat se			Zdeněk Brož |  | go to any lengths (encz)
 | go to any lengths, |  | go to any trouble (encz)
 | go to any trouble, |  | go to bat for (encz)
 | go to bat for, |  | go to bed (encz)
 | go to bed,jít do postele			Zdeněk Brožgo to bed,jít spát			Zdeněk Brož |  | go to get (encz)
 | go to get,vyzvednout	[fráz.]	koho/co kde	Pino |  | go to great lengths (encz)
 | go to great lengths, |  | go to hell in a handbasket (encz)
 | go to hell in a handbasket, |  | go to pieces (encz)
 | go to pieces,rozbít se			Zdeněk Brožgo to pieces,rozsypat se			Zdeněk Brožgo to pieces,roztříštit se			Zdeněk Brožgo to pieces,zhroutit se			Zdeněk Brož |  | go to pot (encz)
 | go to pot,natáhnout brka			Zdeněk Brož |  | go to sleep (encz)
 | go to sleep,usnout	v:		Zdeněk Brož |  | go to the aid of someone (encz)
 | go to the aid of someone,jít někomu na pomoc	[fráz.]		Pino |  | go to the dogs (encz)
 | go to the dogs,jít od desíti k pěti	[fráz.]		Pinogo to the dogs,jít z kopce	[fráz.]	s někým, něčím, např. "The man went to the dogs after he started drinking."	Pinogo to the dogs,zhoršovat se	[fráz.]	rapidně, jít od desíti k pěti	Pino
 |  | go to town on something (encz)
 | go to town on something,vrhnout se na něco	[fráz.]	se zanícením	Pino |  | go to war (encz)
 | go to war,	v: |  | go together (encz)
 | go together,hodit se k sobě	[fráz.]		Pino |  | go too far (encz)
 | go too far,zacházet do krajnosti			Zdeněk Brož |  | let it go to your head (encz)
 | let it go to your head, |  | Go to (gcide)
 | Go \Go\, v. i. [imp. Went (w[e^]nt); p. p. Gone (g[o^]n; 115); p. pr. & vb. n. Going. Went comes from the AS,
 wendan. See Wend, v. i.] [OE. gan, gon, AS. g[=a]n, akin to
 D. gaan, G. gehn, gehen, OHG. g[=e]n, g[=a]n, SW. g[*a], Dan.
 gaae; cf. Gr. kicha`nai to reach, overtake, Skr. h[=a] to go,
 AS. gangan, and E. gang. The past tense in AS., eode, is from
 the root i to go, as is also Goth. iddja went. [root]47a. Cf.
 Gang, v. i., Wend.]
 1. To pass from one place to another; to be in motion; to be
 in a state not motionless or at rest; to proceed; to
 advance; to make progress; -- used, in various
 applications, of the movement of both animate and
 inanimate beings, by whatever means, and also of the
 movements of the mind; also figuratively applied.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. To move upon the feet, or step by step; to walk; also, to
 walk step by step, or leisurely.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In old writers go is much used as opposed to run, or
 ride. "Whereso I go or ride." --Chaucer.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 You know that love
 Will creep in service where it can not go.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Thou must run to him; for thou hast staid so long
 that going will scarce serve the turn. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He fell from running to going, and from going to
 clambering upon his hands and his knees.
 --Bunyan.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In Chaucer go is used frequently with the pronoun in
 the objective used reflexively; as, he goeth him home.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. To be passed on fron one to another; to pass; to
 circulate; hence, with for, to have currency; to be taken,
 accepted, or regarded.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The man went among men for an old man in the days of
 Saul.                                 --1 Sa. xvii.
 12.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 [The money] should go according to its true value.
 --Locke.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. To proceed or happen in a given manner; to fare; to move
 on or be carried on; to have course; to come to an issue
 or result; to succeed; to turn out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 How goes the night, boy ?             --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I think, as the world goes, he was a good sort of
 man enough.                           --Arbuthnot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Whether the cause goes for me or against me, you
 must pay me the reward.               --I Watts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. To proceed or tend toward a result, consequence, or
 product; to tend; to conduce; to be an ingredient; to
 avail; to apply; to contribute; -- often with the
 infinitive; as, this goes to show.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Against right reason all your counsels go. --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To master the foul flend there goeth some complement
 knowledge of theology.                --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. To apply one's self; to set one's self; to undertake.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Seeing himself confronted by so many, like a
 resolute orator, he went not to denial, but to
 justify his cruel falsehood.          --Sir P.
 Sidney.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go, in this sense, is often used in the present
 participle with the auxiliary verb to be, before an
 infinitive, to express a future of intention, or to
 denote design; as, I was going to say; I am going to
 begin harvest.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. To proceed by a mental operation; to pass in mind or by an
 act of the memory or imagination; -- generally with over
 or through.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By going over all these particulars, you may receive
 some tolerable satisfaction about this great
 subject.                              --South.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. To be with young; to be pregnant; to gestate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The fruit she goes with,
 I pray for heartily, that it may find
 Good time, and live.                  --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. To move from the person speaking, or from the point whence
 the action is contemplated; to pass away; to leave; to
 depart; -- in opposition to stay and come.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I will let you go, that ye may sacrifice to the Lord
 your God; . . . only ye shall not go very far away.
 --Ex. viii.
 28.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 10. To pass away; to depart forever; to be lost or ruined; to
 perish; to decline; to decease; to die.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By Saint George, he's gone!
 That spear wound hath our master sped. --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 11. To reach; to extend; to lead; as, a line goes across the
 street; his land goes to the river; this road goes to New
 York.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 His amorous expressions go no further than virtue
 may allow.                           --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 12. To have recourse; to resort; as, to go to law.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go is used, in combination with many prepositions and
 adverbs, to denote motion of the kind indicated by the
 preposition or adverb, in which, and not in the verb,
 lies the principal force of the expression; as, to go
 against to go into, to go out, to go aside, to go
 astray, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Go to, come; move; go away; -- a phrase of exclamation,
 serious or ironical.
 
 To go a-begging, not to be in demand; to be undesired.
 
 To go about.
 (a) To set about; to enter upon a scheme of action; to
 undertake. "They went about to slay him." --Acts ix.
 29.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 They never go about . . . to hide or palliate
 their vices.                     --Swift.
 (b) (Naut.) To tack; to turn the head of a ship; to wear.
 
 
 To go abraod.
 (a) To go to a foreign country.
 (b) To go out of doors.
 (c) To become public; to be published or disclosed; to be
 current.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Then went this saying abroad among the
 brethren.                        --John xxi.
 23.
 
 To go against.
 (a) To march against; to attack.
 (b) To be in opposition to; to be disagreeable to.
 
 To go ahead.
 (a) To go in advance.
 (b) To go on; to make progress; to proceed.
 
 To go and come. See To come and go, under Come.
 
 To go aside.
 (a) To withdraw; to retire.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He . . . went aside privately into a desert
 place.                           --Luke. ix.
 10.
 (b) To go from what is right; to err. --Num. v. 29.
 
 To go back on.
 (a) To retrace (one's path or footsteps).
 (b) To abandon; to turn against; to betray. [Slang, U.
 S.]
 
 To go below
 (Naut), to go below deck.
 
 To go between, to interpose or mediate between; to be a
 secret agent between parties; in a bad sense, to pander.
 
 
 To go beyond. See under Beyond.
 
 To go by, to pass away unnoticed; to omit.
 
 To go by the board (Naut.), to fall or be carried
 overboard; as, the mast went by the board.
 
 To go down.
 (a) To descend.
 (b) To go below the horizon; as, the sun has gone down.
 (c) To sink; to founder; -- said of ships, etc.
 (d) To be swallowed; -- used literally or figuratively.
 [Colloq.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Nothing so ridiculous, . . . but it goes down
 whole with him for truth.        --L' Estrange.
 
 To go far.
 (a) To go to a distance.
 (b) To have much weight or influence.
 
 To go for.
 (a) To go in quest of.
 (b) To represent; to pass for.
 (c) To favor; to advocate.
 (d) To attack; to assault. [Low]
 (e) To sell for; to be parted with for (a price).
 
 To go for nothing, to be parted with for no compensation or
 result; to have no value, efficacy, or influence; to count
 for nothing.
 
 To go forth.
 (a) To depart from a place.
 (b) To be divulged or made generally known; to emanate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The law shall go forth of Zion, and the word of
 the Lord from Jerusalem.         --Micah iv. 2.
 
 To go hard with, to trouble, pain, or endanger.
 
 To go in, to engage in; to take part. [Colloq.]
 
 To go in and out, to do the business of life; to live; to
 have free access. --John x. 9.
 
 To go in for. [Colloq.]
 (a) To go for; to favor or advocate (a candidate, a
 measure, etc.).
 (b) To seek to acquire or attain to (wealth, honor,
 preferment, etc.)
 (c) To complete for (a reward, election, etc.).
 (d) To make the object of one's labors, studies, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He was as ready to go in for statistics as for
 anything else.                   --Dickens.
 
 
 To go in to or To go in unto.
 (a) To enter the presence of. --Esther iv. 16.
 (b) To have sexual intercourse with. [Script.]
 
 To go into.
 (a) To speak of, investigate, or discuss (a question,
 subject, etc.).
 (b) To participate in (a war, a business, etc.).
 
 To go large.
 (Naut) See under Large.
 
 To go off.
 (a) To go away; to depart.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The leaders . . . will not go off until they
 hear you.                        --Shak.
 (b) To cease; to intermit; as, this sickness went off.
 (c) To die. --Shak.
 (d) To explode or be discharged; -- said of gunpowder, of
 a gun, a mine, etc.
 (e) To find a purchaser; to be sold or disposed of.
 (f) To pass off; to take place; to be accomplished.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The wedding went off much as such affairs do.
 --Mrs.
 Caskell.
 
 To go on.
 (a) To proceed; to advance further; to continue; as, to
 go on reading.
 (b) To be put or drawn on; to fit over; as, the coat will
 not go on.
 
 To go all fours, to correspond exactly, point for point.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 It is not easy to make a simile go on all fours.
 --Macaulay.
 
 To go out.
 (a) To issue forth from a place.
 (b) To go abroad; to make an excursion or expedition.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 There are other men fitter to go out than I.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 What went ye out for to see ?    --Matt. xi. 7,
 8, 9.
 (c) To become diffused, divulged, or spread abroad, as
 news, fame etc.
 (d) To expire; to die; to cease; to come to an end; as,
 the light has gone out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Life itself goes out at thy displeasure.
 --Addison.
 
 To go over.
 (a) To traverse; to cross, as a river, boundary, etc.; to
 change sides.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I must not go over Jordan.       --Deut. iv.
 22.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Let me go over, and see the good land that is
 beyond Jordan.                   --Deut. iii.
 25.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Ishmael . . . departed to go over to the
 Ammonites.                       --Jer. xli.
 10.
 (b) To read, or study; to examine; to review; as, to go
 over one's accounts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 If we go over the laws of Christianity, we
 shall find that . . . they enjoin the same
 thing.                           --Tillotson.
 (c) To transcend; to surpass.
 (d) To be postponed; as, the bill went over for the
 session.
 (e) (Chem.) To be converted (into a specified substance
 or material); as, monoclinic sulphur goes over into
 orthorhombic, by standing; sucrose goes over into
 dextrose and levulose.
 
 To go through.
 (a) To accomplish; as, to go through a work.
 (b) To suffer; to endure to the end; as, to go through a
 surgical operation or a tedious illness.
 (c) To spend completely; to exhaust, as a fortune.
 (d) To strip or despoil (one) of his property. [Slang]
 (e) To botch or bungle a business. [Scot.]
 
 To go through with, to perform, as a calculation, to the
 end; to complete.
 
 To go to ground.
 (a) To escape into a hole; -- said of a hunted fox.
 (b) To fall in battle.
 
 To go to naught (Colloq.), to prove abortive, or
 unavailling.
 
 To go under.
 (a) To set; -- said of the sun.
 (b) To be known or recognized by (a name, title, etc.).
 (c) To be overwhelmed, submerged, or defeated; to perish;
 to succumb.
 
 To go up, to come to nothing; to prove abortive; to fail.
 [Slang]
 
 To go upon, to act upon, as a foundation or hypothesis.
 
 To go with.
 (a) To accompany.
 (b) To coincide or agree with.
 (c) To suit; to harmonize with.
 
 To go well with, To go ill with, To go hard with, to
 affect (one) in such manner.
 
 To go without, to be, or to remain, destitute of.
 
 To go wrong.
 (a) To take a wrong road or direction; to wander or
 stray.
 (b) To depart from virtue.
 (c) To happen unfortunately; to unexpectedly cause a
 mishap or failure.
 (d) To miss success; to fail.
 
 To let go, to allow to depart; to quit one's hold; to
 release.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | go to hell in a handbasket (gcide)
 | handbasket \hand"bask*et\ n. a container that is usually woven and has handles.
 
 Syn: basket.
 [WordNet 1.5]
 
 go to hell in a handbasket to deteriorate substantially and
 quickly; as, after they lost the contract, the company's
 profits went to hell in a handbasket.
 [PJC]
 |  | To go to ground (gcide)
 | Go \Go\, v. i. [imp. Went (w[e^]nt); p. p. Gone (g[o^]n; 115); p. pr. & vb. n. Going. Went comes from the AS,
 wendan. See Wend, v. i.] [OE. gan, gon, AS. g[=a]n, akin to
 D. gaan, G. gehn, gehen, OHG. g[=e]n, g[=a]n, SW. g[*a], Dan.
 gaae; cf. Gr. kicha`nai to reach, overtake, Skr. h[=a] to go,
 AS. gangan, and E. gang. The past tense in AS., eode, is from
 the root i to go, as is also Goth. iddja went. [root]47a. Cf.
 Gang, v. i., Wend.]
 1. To pass from one place to another; to be in motion; to be
 in a state not motionless or at rest; to proceed; to
 advance; to make progress; -- used, in various
 applications, of the movement of both animate and
 inanimate beings, by whatever means, and also of the
 movements of the mind; also figuratively applied.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. To move upon the feet, or step by step; to walk; also, to
 walk step by step, or leisurely.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In old writers go is much used as opposed to run, or
 ride. "Whereso I go or ride." --Chaucer.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 You know that love
 Will creep in service where it can not go.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Thou must run to him; for thou hast staid so long
 that going will scarce serve the turn. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He fell from running to going, and from going to
 clambering upon his hands and his knees.
 --Bunyan.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In Chaucer go is used frequently with the pronoun in
 the objective used reflexively; as, he goeth him home.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. To be passed on fron one to another; to pass; to
 circulate; hence, with for, to have currency; to be taken,
 accepted, or regarded.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The man went among men for an old man in the days of
 Saul.                                 --1 Sa. xvii.
 12.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 [The money] should go according to its true value.
 --Locke.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. To proceed or happen in a given manner; to fare; to move
 on or be carried on; to have course; to come to an issue
 or result; to succeed; to turn out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 How goes the night, boy ?             --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I think, as the world goes, he was a good sort of
 man enough.                           --Arbuthnot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Whether the cause goes for me or against me, you
 must pay me the reward.               --I Watts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. To proceed or tend toward a result, consequence, or
 product; to tend; to conduce; to be an ingredient; to
 avail; to apply; to contribute; -- often with the
 infinitive; as, this goes to show.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Against right reason all your counsels go. --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To master the foul flend there goeth some complement
 knowledge of theology.                --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. To apply one's self; to set one's self; to undertake.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Seeing himself confronted by so many, like a
 resolute orator, he went not to denial, but to
 justify his cruel falsehood.          --Sir P.
 Sidney.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go, in this sense, is often used in the present
 participle with the auxiliary verb to be, before an
 infinitive, to express a future of intention, or to
 denote design; as, I was going to say; I am going to
 begin harvest.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. To proceed by a mental operation; to pass in mind or by an
 act of the memory or imagination; -- generally with over
 or through.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By going over all these particulars, you may receive
 some tolerable satisfaction about this great
 subject.                              --South.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. To be with young; to be pregnant; to gestate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The fruit she goes with,
 I pray for heartily, that it may find
 Good time, and live.                  --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. To move from the person speaking, or from the point whence
 the action is contemplated; to pass away; to leave; to
 depart; -- in opposition to stay and come.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I will let you go, that ye may sacrifice to the Lord
 your God; . . . only ye shall not go very far away.
 --Ex. viii.
 28.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 10. To pass away; to depart forever; to be lost or ruined; to
 perish; to decline; to decease; to die.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By Saint George, he's gone!
 That spear wound hath our master sped. --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 11. To reach; to extend; to lead; as, a line goes across the
 street; his land goes to the river; this road goes to New
 York.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 His amorous expressions go no further than virtue
 may allow.                           --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 12. To have recourse; to resort; as, to go to law.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go is used, in combination with many prepositions and
 adverbs, to denote motion of the kind indicated by the
 preposition or adverb, in which, and not in the verb,
 lies the principal force of the expression; as, to go
 against to go into, to go out, to go aside, to go
 astray, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Go to, come; move; go away; -- a phrase of exclamation,
 serious or ironical.
 
 To go a-begging, not to be in demand; to be undesired.
 
 To go about.
 (a) To set about; to enter upon a scheme of action; to
 undertake. "They went about to slay him." --Acts ix.
 29.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 They never go about . . . to hide or palliate
 their vices.                     --Swift.
 (b) (Naut.) To tack; to turn the head of a ship; to wear.
 
 
 To go abraod.
 (a) To go to a foreign country.
 (b) To go out of doors.
 (c) To become public; to be published or disclosed; to be
 current.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Then went this saying abroad among the
 brethren.                        --John xxi.
 23.
 
 To go against.
 (a) To march against; to attack.
 (b) To be in opposition to; to be disagreeable to.
 
 To go ahead.
 (a) To go in advance.
 (b) To go on; to make progress; to proceed.
 
 To go and come. See To come and go, under Come.
 
 To go aside.
 (a) To withdraw; to retire.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He . . . went aside privately into a desert
 place.                           --Luke. ix.
 10.
 (b) To go from what is right; to err. --Num. v. 29.
 
 To go back on.
 (a) To retrace (one's path or footsteps).
 (b) To abandon; to turn against; to betray. [Slang, U.
 S.]
 
 To go below
 (Naut), to go below deck.
 
 To go between, to interpose or mediate between; to be a
 secret agent between parties; in a bad sense, to pander.
 
 
 To go beyond. See under Beyond.
 
 To go by, to pass away unnoticed; to omit.
 
 To go by the board (Naut.), to fall or be carried
 overboard; as, the mast went by the board.
 
 To go down.
 (a) To descend.
 (b) To go below the horizon; as, the sun has gone down.
 (c) To sink; to founder; -- said of ships, etc.
 (d) To be swallowed; -- used literally or figuratively.
 [Colloq.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Nothing so ridiculous, . . . but it goes down
 whole with him for truth.        --L' Estrange.
 
 To go far.
 (a) To go to a distance.
 (b) To have much weight or influence.
 
 To go for.
 (a) To go in quest of.
 (b) To represent; to pass for.
 (c) To favor; to advocate.
 (d) To attack; to assault. [Low]
 (e) To sell for; to be parted with for (a price).
 
 To go for nothing, to be parted with for no compensation or
 result; to have no value, efficacy, or influence; to count
 for nothing.
 
 To go forth.
 (a) To depart from a place.
 (b) To be divulged or made generally known; to emanate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The law shall go forth of Zion, and the word of
 the Lord from Jerusalem.         --Micah iv. 2.
 
 To go hard with, to trouble, pain, or endanger.
 
 To go in, to engage in; to take part. [Colloq.]
 
 To go in and out, to do the business of life; to live; to
 have free access. --John x. 9.
 
 To go in for. [Colloq.]
 (a) To go for; to favor or advocate (a candidate, a
 measure, etc.).
 (b) To seek to acquire or attain to (wealth, honor,
 preferment, etc.)
 (c) To complete for (a reward, election, etc.).
 (d) To make the object of one's labors, studies, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He was as ready to go in for statistics as for
 anything else.                   --Dickens.
 
 
 To go in to or To go in unto.
 (a) To enter the presence of. --Esther iv. 16.
 (b) To have sexual intercourse with. [Script.]
 
 To go into.
 (a) To speak of, investigate, or discuss (a question,
 subject, etc.).
 (b) To participate in (a war, a business, etc.).
 
 To go large.
 (Naut) See under Large.
 
 To go off.
 (a) To go away; to depart.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The leaders . . . will not go off until they
 hear you.                        --Shak.
 (b) To cease; to intermit; as, this sickness went off.
 (c) To die. --Shak.
 (d) To explode or be discharged; -- said of gunpowder, of
 a gun, a mine, etc.
 (e) To find a purchaser; to be sold or disposed of.
 (f) To pass off; to take place; to be accomplished.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The wedding went off much as such affairs do.
 --Mrs.
 Caskell.
 
 To go on.
 (a) To proceed; to advance further; to continue; as, to
 go on reading.
 (b) To be put or drawn on; to fit over; as, the coat will
 not go on.
 
 To go all fours, to correspond exactly, point for point.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 It is not easy to make a simile go on all fours.
 --Macaulay.
 
 To go out.
 (a) To issue forth from a place.
 (b) To go abroad; to make an excursion or expedition.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 There are other men fitter to go out than I.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 What went ye out for to see ?    --Matt. xi. 7,
 8, 9.
 (c) To become diffused, divulged, or spread abroad, as
 news, fame etc.
 (d) To expire; to die; to cease; to come to an end; as,
 the light has gone out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Life itself goes out at thy displeasure.
 --Addison.
 
 To go over.
 (a) To traverse; to cross, as a river, boundary, etc.; to
 change sides.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I must not go over Jordan.       --Deut. iv.
 22.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Let me go over, and see the good land that is
 beyond Jordan.                   --Deut. iii.
 25.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Ishmael . . . departed to go over to the
 Ammonites.                       --Jer. xli.
 10.
 (b) To read, or study; to examine; to review; as, to go
 over one's accounts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 If we go over the laws of Christianity, we
 shall find that . . . they enjoin the same
 thing.                           --Tillotson.
 (c) To transcend; to surpass.
 (d) To be postponed; as, the bill went over for the
 session.
 (e) (Chem.) To be converted (into a specified substance
 or material); as, monoclinic sulphur goes over into
 orthorhombic, by standing; sucrose goes over into
 dextrose and levulose.
 
 To go through.
 (a) To accomplish; as, to go through a work.
 (b) To suffer; to endure to the end; as, to go through a
 surgical operation or a tedious illness.
 (c) To spend completely; to exhaust, as a fortune.
 (d) To strip or despoil (one) of his property. [Slang]
 (e) To botch or bungle a business. [Scot.]
 
 To go through with, to perform, as a calculation, to the
 end; to complete.
 
 To go to ground.
 (a) To escape into a hole; -- said of a hunted fox.
 (b) To fall in battle.
 
 To go to naught (Colloq.), to prove abortive, or
 unavailling.
 
 To go under.
 (a) To set; -- said of the sun.
 (b) To be known or recognized by (a name, title, etc.).
 (c) To be overwhelmed, submerged, or defeated; to perish;
 to succumb.
 
 To go up, to come to nothing; to prove abortive; to fail.
 [Slang]
 
 To go upon, to act upon, as a foundation or hypothesis.
 
 To go with.
 (a) To accompany.
 (b) To coincide or agree with.
 (c) To suit; to harmonize with.
 
 To go well with, To go ill with, To go hard with, to
 affect (one) in such manner.
 
 To go without, to be, or to remain, destitute of.
 
 To go wrong.
 (a) To take a wrong road or direction; to wander or
 stray.
 (b) To depart from virtue.
 (c) To happen unfortunately; to unexpectedly cause a
 mishap or failure.
 (d) To miss success; to fail.
 
 To let go, to allow to depart; to quit one's hold; to
 release.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to law (gcide)
 | Law \Law\ (l[add]), n. [OE. lawe, laghe, AS. lagu, from the root of E. lie: akin to OS. lag, Icel. l["o]g, Sw. lag, Dan. lov;
 cf. L. lex, E. legal. A law is that which is laid, set, or
 fixed; like statute, fr. L. statuere to make to stand. See
 Lie to be prostrate.]
 1. In general, a rule of being or of conduct, established by
 an authority able to enforce its will; a controlling
 regulation; the mode or order according to which an agent
 or a power acts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: A law may be universal or particular, written or
 unwritten, published or secret. From the nature of the
 highest laws a degree of permanency or stability is
 always implied; but the power which makes a law, or a
 superior power, may annul or change it.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 These are the statutes and judgments and laws,
 which the Lord made.               --Lev. xxvi.
 46.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The law of thy God, and the law of the King.
 --Ezra vii.
 26.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 As if they would confine the Interminable . . .
 Who made our laws to bind us, not himself.
 --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 His mind his kingdom, and his will his law.
 --Cowper.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. In morals: The will of God as the rule for the disposition
 and conduct of all responsible beings toward him and
 toward each other; a rule of living, conformable to
 righteousness; the rule of action as obligatory on the
 conscience or moral nature.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. The Jewish or Mosaic code, and that part of Scripture
 where it is written, in distinction from the gospel;
 hence, also, the Old Testament. Specifically: the first
 five books of the bible, called also Torah, Pentatech,
 or Law of Moses.
 [1913 Webster +PJC]
 
 What things soever the law saith, it saith to them
 who are under the law . . . But now the
 righteousness of God without the law is manifested,
 being witnessed by the law and the prophets. --Rom.
 iii. 19, 21.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. In human government:
 (a) An organic rule, as a constitution or charter,
 establishing and defining the conditions of the
 existence of a state or other organized community.
 (b) Any edict, decree, order, ordinance, statute,
 resolution, judicial, decision, usage, etc., or
 recognized, and enforced, by the controlling
 authority.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. In philosophy and physics: A rule of being, operation, or
 change, so certain and constant that it is conceived of as
 imposed by the will of God or by some controlling
 authority; as, the law of gravitation; the laws of motion;
 the law heredity; the laws of thought; the laws of cause
 and effect; law of self-preservation.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. In mathematics: The rule according to which anything, as
 the change of value of a variable, or the value of the
 terms of a series, proceeds; mode or order of sequence.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. In arts, works, games, etc.: The rules of construction, or
 of procedure, conforming to the conditions of success; a
 principle, maxim; or usage; as, the laws of poetry, of
 architecture, of courtesy, or of whist.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. Collectively, the whole body of rules relating to one
 subject, or emanating from one source; -- including
 usually the writings pertaining to them, and judicial
 proceedings under them; as, divine law; English law; Roman
 law; the law of real property; insurance law.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. Legal science; jurisprudence; the principles of equity;
 applied justice.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Reason is the life of the law; nay, the common law
 itself is nothing else but reason.    --Coke.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Law is beneficence acting by rule.    --Burke.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 And sovereign Law, that state's collected will
 O'er thrones and globes elate,
 Sits empress, crowning good, repressing ill. --Sir
 W. Jones.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 10. Trial by the laws of the land; judicial remedy;
 litigation; as, to go law.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 When every case in law is right.     --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He found law dear and left it cheap. --Brougham.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 11. An oath, as in the presence of a court. [Obs.] See {Wager
 of law}, under Wager.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Avogadro's law (Chem.), a fundamental conception, according
 to which, under similar conditions of temperature and
 pressure, all gases and vapors contain in the same volume
 the same number of ultimate molecules; -- so named after
 Avogadro, an Italian scientist. Sometimes called
 Amp[`e]re's law.
 
 Bode's law (Astron.), an approximative empirical expression
 of the distances of the planets from the sun, as follows:
 -- Mer. Ven. Earth. Mars. Aste. Jup. Sat. Uran. Nep. 4 4 4
 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 3 6 12 24 48 96 192 384 -- -- -- -- -- -- --
 --- --- 4 7 10 16 28 52 100 196 388 5.9 7.3 10 15.2 27.4
 52 95.4 192 300 where each distance (line third) is the
 sum of 4 and a multiple of 3 by the series 0, 1, 2, 4, 8,
 etc., the true distances being given in the lower line.
 
 Boyle's law (Physics), an expression of the fact, that when
 an elastic fluid is subjected to compression, and kept at
 a constant temperature, the product of the pressure and
 volume is a constant quantity, i. e., the volume is
 inversely proportioned to the pressure; -- known also as
 Mariotte's law, and the law of Boyle and Mariotte.
 
 Brehon laws. See under Brehon.
 
 Canon law, the body of ecclesiastical law adopted in the
 Christian Church, certain portions of which (for example,
 the law of marriage as existing before the Council of
 Tent) were brought to America by the English colonists as
 part of the common law of the land. --Wharton.
 
 Civil law, a term used by writers to designate Roman law,
 with modifications thereof which have been made in the
 different countries into which that law has been
 introduced. The civil law, instead of the common law,
 prevails in the State of Louisiana. --Wharton.
 
 Commercial law. See Law merchant (below).
 
 Common law. See under Common.
 
 Criminal law, that branch of jurisprudence which relates to
 crimes.
 
 Ecclesiastical law. See under Ecclesiastical.
 
 Grimm's law (Philol.), a statement (propounded by the
 German philologist Jacob Grimm) of certain regular changes
 which the primitive Indo-European mute consonants,
 so-called (most plainly seen in Sanskrit and, with some
 changes, in Greek and Latin), have undergone in the
 Teutonic languages. Examples: Skr. bh[=a]t[.r], L. frater,
 E. brother, G. bruder; L. tres, E. three, G. drei, Skr.
 go, E. cow, G. kuh; Skr. dh[=a] to put, Gr. ti-qe`-nai, E.
 do, OHG, tuon, G. thun. See also lautverschiebung.
 
 Kepler's laws (Astron.), three important laws or
 expressions of the order of the planetary motions,
 discovered by John Kepler. They are these: (1) The orbit
 of a planet with respect to the sun is an ellipse, the sun
 being in one of the foci. (2) The areas swept over by a
 vector drawn from the sun to a planet are proportioned to
 the times of describing them. (3) The squares of the times
 of revolution of two planets are in the ratio of the cubes
 of their mean distances.
 
 Law binding, a plain style of leather binding, used for law
 books; -- called also law calf.
 
 Law book, a book containing, or treating of, laws.
 
 Law calf. See Law binding (above).
 
 Law day.
 (a) Formerly, a day of holding court, esp. a court-leet.
 (b) The day named in a mortgage for the payment of the
 money to secure which it was given. [U. S.]
 
 Law French, the dialect of Norman, which was used in
 judicial proceedings and law books in England from the
 days of William the Conqueror to the thirty-sixth year of
 Edward III.
 
 Law language, the language used in legal writings and
 forms.
 
 Law Latin. See under Latin.
 
 Law lords, peers in the British Parliament who have held
 high judicial office, or have been noted in the legal
 profession.
 
 Law merchant, or Commercial law, a system of rules by
 which trade and commerce are regulated; -- deduced from
 the custom of merchants, and regulated by judicial
 decisions, as also by enactments of legislatures.
 
 Law of Charles (Physics), the law that the volume of a
 given mass of gas increases or decreases, by a definite
 fraction of its value for a given rise or fall of
 temperature; -- sometimes less correctly styled {Gay
 Lussac's law}, or Dalton's law.
 
 Law of nations. See International law, under
 International.
 
 Law of nature.
 (a) A broad generalization expressive of the constant
 action, or effect, of natural conditions; as, death
 is a law of nature; self-defense is a law of nature.
 See Law, 4.
 (b) A term denoting the standard, or system, of morality
 deducible from a study of the nature and natural
 relations of human beings independent of supernatural
 revelation or of municipal and social usages.
 
 Law of the land, due process of law; the general law of the
 land.
 
 Laws of honor. See under Honor.
 
 Laws of motion (Physics), three laws defined by Sir Isaac
 Newton: (1) Every body perseveres in its state of rest or
 of moving uniformly in a straight line, except so far as
 it is made to change that state by external force. (2)
 Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force,
 and takes place in the direction in which the force is
 impressed. (3) Reaction is always equal and opposite to
 action, that is to say, the actions of two bodies upon
 each other are always equal and in opposite directions.
 
 Marine law, or Maritime law, the law of the sea; a branch
 of the law merchant relating to the affairs of the sea,
 such as seamen, ships, shipping, navigation, and the like.
 --Bouvier.
 
 Mariotte's law. See Boyle's law (above).
 
 Martial law.See under Martial.
 
 Military law, a branch of the general municipal law,
 consisting of rules ordained for the government of the
 military force of a state in peace and war, and
 administered in courts martial. --Kent. --Warren's
 Blackstone.
 
 Moral law, the law of duty as regards what is right and
 wrong in the sight of God; specifically, the ten
 commandments given by Moses. See Law, 2.
 
 Mosaic law, or Ceremonial law. (Script.) See Law, 3.
 
 Municipal law, or Positive law, a rule prescribed by the
 supreme power of a state, declaring some right, enforcing
 some duty, or prohibiting some act; -- distinguished from
 international law and constitutional law. See Law,
 1.
 
 Periodic law. (Chem.) See under Periodic.
 
 Roman law, the system of principles and laws found in the
 codes and treatises of the lawmakers and jurists of
 ancient Rome, and incorporated more or less into the laws
 of the several European countries and colonies founded by
 them. See Civil law (above).
 
 Statute law, the law as stated in statutes or positive
 enactments of the legislative body.
 
 Sumptuary law. See under Sumptuary.
 
 To go to law, to seek a settlement of any matter by
 bringing it before the courts of law; to sue or prosecute
 some one.
 
 To take the law of, or To have the law of, to bring the
 law to bear upon; as, to take the law of one's neighbor.
 --Addison.
 
 Wager of law. See under Wager.
 
 Syn: Justice; equity.
 
 Usage: Law, Statute, Common law, Regulation, Edict,
 Decree. Law is generic, and, when used with
 reference to, or in connection with, the other words
 here considered, denotes whatever is commanded by one
 who has a right to require obedience. A statute is a
 particular law drawn out in form, and distinctly
 enacted and proclaimed. Common law is a rule of action
 founded on long usage and the decisions of courts of
 justice. A regulation is a limited and often,
 temporary law, intended to secure some particular end
 or object. An edict is a command or law issued by a
 sovereign, and is peculiar to a despotic government. A
 decree is a permanent order either of a court or of
 the executive government. See Justice.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to loggerheads (gcide)
 | Loggerhead \Log"ger*head`\, n. [Log + head.] 1. A blockhead; a dunce; a numskull. --Shak. Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. A spherical mass of iron, with a long handle, used to heat
 tar.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. (Naut.) An upright piece of round timber, in a whaleboat,
 over which a turn of the line is taken when it is running
 out too fast. --Ham. Nav. Encyc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. (Zool.) A very large marine turtle ({Thalassochelys
 caretta} syn. Thalassochelys caouana), common in the
 warmer parts of the Atlantic Ocean, from Brazil to Cape
 Cod; -- called also logger-headed turtle.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. (Zool.) An American shrike (Lanius Ludovicianus),
 similar to the butcher bird, but smaller. See Shrike.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To be at loggerheads, To fall to loggerheads, or {To go
 to loggerheads}, to quarrel; to be at strife. --L' Estrange.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to meat (gcide)
 | Meat \Meat\ (m[=e]t), n. [OE. mete, AS. mete; akin to OS. mat, meti, D. met hashed meat, G. mettwurst sausage, OHG. maz
 food, Icel. matr, Sw. mat, Dan. mad, Goth. mats. Cf. Mast
 fruit, Mush.]
 1. Food, in general; anything eaten for nourishment, either
 by man or beast. Hence, the edible part of anything; as,
 the meat of a lobster, a nut, or an egg. --Chaucer.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb
 bearing seed, . . . to you it shall be for meat.
 --Gen. i. 29.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Every moving thing that liveth shall be meat for
 you.                                  --Gen. ix. 3.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. The flesh of animals used as food; esp., animal muscle;
 as, a breakfast of bread and fruit without meat.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. Specifically: Dinner; the chief meal. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Meat biscuit. See under Biscuit.
 
 Meat earth (Mining), vegetable mold. --Raymond.
 
 Meat fly. (Zool.) See Flesh fly, under Flesh.
 
 Meat offering (Script.), an offering of food, esp. of a
 cake made of flour with salt and oil.
 
 To go to meat, to go to a meal. [Obs.]
 
 To sit at meat, to sit at the table in taking food.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to naught (gcide)
 | Go \Go\, v. i. [imp. Went (w[e^]nt); p. p. Gone (g[o^]n; 115); p. pr. & vb. n. Going. Went comes from the AS,
 wendan. See Wend, v. i.] [OE. gan, gon, AS. g[=a]n, akin to
 D. gaan, G. gehn, gehen, OHG. g[=e]n, g[=a]n, SW. g[*a], Dan.
 gaae; cf. Gr. kicha`nai to reach, overtake, Skr. h[=a] to go,
 AS. gangan, and E. gang. The past tense in AS., eode, is from
 the root i to go, as is also Goth. iddja went. [root]47a. Cf.
 Gang, v. i., Wend.]
 1. To pass from one place to another; to be in motion; to be
 in a state not motionless or at rest; to proceed; to
 advance; to make progress; -- used, in various
 applications, of the movement of both animate and
 inanimate beings, by whatever means, and also of the
 movements of the mind; also figuratively applied.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. To move upon the feet, or step by step; to walk; also, to
 walk step by step, or leisurely.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In old writers go is much used as opposed to run, or
 ride. "Whereso I go or ride." --Chaucer.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 You know that love
 Will creep in service where it can not go.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Thou must run to him; for thou hast staid so long
 that going will scarce serve the turn. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He fell from running to going, and from going to
 clambering upon his hands and his knees.
 --Bunyan.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: In Chaucer go is used frequently with the pronoun in
 the objective used reflexively; as, he goeth him home.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. To be passed on fron one to another; to pass; to
 circulate; hence, with for, to have currency; to be taken,
 accepted, or regarded.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The man went among men for an old man in the days of
 Saul.                                 --1 Sa. xvii.
 12.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 [The money] should go according to its true value.
 --Locke.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. To proceed or happen in a given manner; to fare; to move
 on or be carried on; to have course; to come to an issue
 or result; to succeed; to turn out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 How goes the night, boy ?             --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I think, as the world goes, he was a good sort of
 man enough.                           --Arbuthnot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Whether the cause goes for me or against me, you
 must pay me the reward.               --I Watts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. To proceed or tend toward a result, consequence, or
 product; to tend; to conduce; to be an ingredient; to
 avail; to apply; to contribute; -- often with the
 infinitive; as, this goes to show.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Against right reason all your counsels go. --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To master the foul flend there goeth some complement
 knowledge of theology.                --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. To apply one's self; to set one's self; to undertake.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Seeing himself confronted by so many, like a
 resolute orator, he went not to denial, but to
 justify his cruel falsehood.          --Sir P.
 Sidney.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go, in this sense, is often used in the present
 participle with the auxiliary verb to be, before an
 infinitive, to express a future of intention, or to
 denote design; as, I was going to say; I am going to
 begin harvest.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. To proceed by a mental operation; to pass in mind or by an
 act of the memory or imagination; -- generally with over
 or through.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By going over all these particulars, you may receive
 some tolerable satisfaction about this great
 subject.                              --South.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. To be with young; to be pregnant; to gestate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The fruit she goes with,
 I pray for heartily, that it may find
 Good time, and live.                  --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. To move from the person speaking, or from the point whence
 the action is contemplated; to pass away; to leave; to
 depart; -- in opposition to stay and come.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I will let you go, that ye may sacrifice to the Lord
 your God; . . . only ye shall not go very far away.
 --Ex. viii.
 28.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 10. To pass away; to depart forever; to be lost or ruined; to
 perish; to decline; to decease; to die.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 By Saint George, he's gone!
 That spear wound hath our master sped. --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 11. To reach; to extend; to lead; as, a line goes across the
 street; his land goes to the river; this road goes to New
 York.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 His amorous expressions go no further than virtue
 may allow.                           --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 12. To have recourse; to resort; as, to go to law.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Go is used, in combination with many prepositions and
 adverbs, to denote motion of the kind indicated by the
 preposition or adverb, in which, and not in the verb,
 lies the principal force of the expression; as, to go
 against to go into, to go out, to go aside, to go
 astray, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Go to, come; move; go away; -- a phrase of exclamation,
 serious or ironical.
 
 To go a-begging, not to be in demand; to be undesired.
 
 To go about.
 (a) To set about; to enter upon a scheme of action; to
 undertake. "They went about to slay him." --Acts ix.
 29.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 They never go about . . . to hide or palliate
 their vices.                     --Swift.
 (b) (Naut.) To tack; to turn the head of a ship; to wear.
 
 
 To go abraod.
 (a) To go to a foreign country.
 (b) To go out of doors.
 (c) To become public; to be published or disclosed; to be
 current.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Then went this saying abroad among the
 brethren.                        --John xxi.
 23.
 
 To go against.
 (a) To march against; to attack.
 (b) To be in opposition to; to be disagreeable to.
 
 To go ahead.
 (a) To go in advance.
 (b) To go on; to make progress; to proceed.
 
 To go and come. See To come and go, under Come.
 
 To go aside.
 (a) To withdraw; to retire.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He . . . went aside privately into a desert
 place.                           --Luke. ix.
 10.
 (b) To go from what is right; to err. --Num. v. 29.
 
 To go back on.
 (a) To retrace (one's path or footsteps).
 (b) To abandon; to turn against; to betray. [Slang, U.
 S.]
 
 To go below
 (Naut), to go below deck.
 
 To go between, to interpose or mediate between; to be a
 secret agent between parties; in a bad sense, to pander.
 
 
 To go beyond. See under Beyond.
 
 To go by, to pass away unnoticed; to omit.
 
 To go by the board (Naut.), to fall or be carried
 overboard; as, the mast went by the board.
 
 To go down.
 (a) To descend.
 (b) To go below the horizon; as, the sun has gone down.
 (c) To sink; to founder; -- said of ships, etc.
 (d) To be swallowed; -- used literally or figuratively.
 [Colloq.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Nothing so ridiculous, . . . but it goes down
 whole with him for truth.        --L' Estrange.
 
 To go far.
 (a) To go to a distance.
 (b) To have much weight or influence.
 
 To go for.
 (a) To go in quest of.
 (b) To represent; to pass for.
 (c) To favor; to advocate.
 (d) To attack; to assault. [Low]
 (e) To sell for; to be parted with for (a price).
 
 To go for nothing, to be parted with for no compensation or
 result; to have no value, efficacy, or influence; to count
 for nothing.
 
 To go forth.
 (a) To depart from a place.
 (b) To be divulged or made generally known; to emanate.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The law shall go forth of Zion, and the word of
 the Lord from Jerusalem.         --Micah iv. 2.
 
 To go hard with, to trouble, pain, or endanger.
 
 To go in, to engage in; to take part. [Colloq.]
 
 To go in and out, to do the business of life; to live; to
 have free access. --John x. 9.
 
 To go in for. [Colloq.]
 (a) To go for; to favor or advocate (a candidate, a
 measure, etc.).
 (b) To seek to acquire or attain to (wealth, honor,
 preferment, etc.)
 (c) To complete for (a reward, election, etc.).
 (d) To make the object of one's labors, studies, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He was as ready to go in for statistics as for
 anything else.                   --Dickens.
 
 
 To go in to or To go in unto.
 (a) To enter the presence of. --Esther iv. 16.
 (b) To have sexual intercourse with. [Script.]
 
 To go into.
 (a) To speak of, investigate, or discuss (a question,
 subject, etc.).
 (b) To participate in (a war, a business, etc.).
 
 To go large.
 (Naut) See under Large.
 
 To go off.
 (a) To go away; to depart.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The leaders . . . will not go off until they
 hear you.                        --Shak.
 (b) To cease; to intermit; as, this sickness went off.
 (c) To die. --Shak.
 (d) To explode or be discharged; -- said of gunpowder, of
 a gun, a mine, etc.
 (e) To find a purchaser; to be sold or disposed of.
 (f) To pass off; to take place; to be accomplished.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The wedding went off much as such affairs do.
 --Mrs.
 Caskell.
 
 To go on.
 (a) To proceed; to advance further; to continue; as, to
 go on reading.
 (b) To be put or drawn on; to fit over; as, the coat will
 not go on.
 
 To go all fours, to correspond exactly, point for point.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 It is not easy to make a simile go on all fours.
 --Macaulay.
 
 To go out.
 (a) To issue forth from a place.
 (b) To go abroad; to make an excursion or expedition.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 There are other men fitter to go out than I.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 What went ye out for to see ?    --Matt. xi. 7,
 8, 9.
 (c) To become diffused, divulged, or spread abroad, as
 news, fame etc.
 (d) To expire; to die; to cease; to come to an end; as,
 the light has gone out.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Life itself goes out at thy displeasure.
 --Addison.
 
 To go over.
 (a) To traverse; to cross, as a river, boundary, etc.; to
 change sides.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I must not go over Jordan.       --Deut. iv.
 22.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Let me go over, and see the good land that is
 beyond Jordan.                   --Deut. iii.
 25.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Ishmael . . . departed to go over to the
 Ammonites.                       --Jer. xli.
 10.
 (b) To read, or study; to examine; to review; as, to go
 over one's accounts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 If we go over the laws of Christianity, we
 shall find that . . . they enjoin the same
 thing.                           --Tillotson.
 (c) To transcend; to surpass.
 (d) To be postponed; as, the bill went over for the
 session.
 (e) (Chem.) To be converted (into a specified substance
 or material); as, monoclinic sulphur goes over into
 orthorhombic, by standing; sucrose goes over into
 dextrose and levulose.
 
 To go through.
 (a) To accomplish; as, to go through a work.
 (b) To suffer; to endure to the end; as, to go through a
 surgical operation or a tedious illness.
 (c) To spend completely; to exhaust, as a fortune.
 (d) To strip or despoil (one) of his property. [Slang]
 (e) To botch or bungle a business. [Scot.]
 
 To go through with, to perform, as a calculation, to the
 end; to complete.
 
 To go to ground.
 (a) To escape into a hole; -- said of a hunted fox.
 (b) To fall in battle.
 
 To go to naught (Colloq.), to prove abortive, or
 unavailling.
 
 To go under.
 (a) To set; -- said of the sun.
 (b) To be known or recognized by (a name, title, etc.).
 (c) To be overwhelmed, submerged, or defeated; to perish;
 to succumb.
 
 To go up, to come to nothing; to prove abortive; to fail.
 [Slang]
 
 To go upon, to act upon, as a foundation or hypothesis.
 
 To go with.
 (a) To accompany.
 (b) To coincide or agree with.
 (c) To suit; to harmonize with.
 
 To go well with, To go ill with, To go hard with, to
 affect (one) in such manner.
 
 To go without, to be, or to remain, destitute of.
 
 To go wrong.
 (a) To take a wrong road or direction; to wander or
 stray.
 (b) To depart from virtue.
 (c) To happen unfortunately; to unexpectedly cause a
 mishap or failure.
 (d) To miss success; to fail.
 
 To let go, to allow to depart; to quit one's hold; to
 release.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to pot (gcide)
 | Pot \Pot\, n. [Akin to LG. pott, D. pot, Dan. potte, Sw. potta, Icel. pottr, F. pot; of unknown origin.]
 1. A metallic or earthen vessel, appropriated to any of a
 great variety of uses, as for boiling meat or vegetables,
 for holding liquids, for plants, etc.; as, a quart pot; a
 flower pot; a bean pot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. An earthen or pewter cup for liquors; a mug.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. The quantity contained in a pot; a potful; as, a pot of
 ale. "Give her a pot and a cake." --De Foe.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. A metal or earthenware extension of a flue above the top
 of a chimney; a chimney pot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. A crucible; as, a graphite pot; a melting pot.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. A wicker vessel for catching fish, eels, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. A perforated cask for draining sugar. --Knight.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. A size of paper. See Pott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. marijuana. [slang]
 [PJC]
 
 10. The total of the bets at stake at one time, as in racing
 or card playing; the pool; also (Racing, Eng.) a horse
 heavily backed; a favorite. [Slang]
 [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
 
 11. (Armor) A plain defensive headpiece; later, and perhaps
 in a jocose sense, any helmet; -- called also {pot
 helmet}.
 [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
 
 12. (Card Playing) The total of the bets at one time; the
 pool.
 [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
 
 Jack pot. See under 2d Jack.
 
 Pot cheese, cottage cheese. See under Cottage.
 
 Pot companion, a companion in drinking.
 
 Pot hanger, a pothook.
 
 Pot herb, any plant, the leaves or stems of which are
 boiled for food, as spinach, lamb's-quarters, purslane,
 and many others.
 
 Pot hunter, one who kills anything and everything that will
 help to fill has bag; also, a hunter who shoots game for
 the table or for the market.
 
 Pot metal.
 (a) The metal from which iron pots are made, different
 from common pig iron.
 (b) An alloy of copper with lead used for making large
 vessels for various purposes in the arts. --Ure.
 (c) A kind of stained glass, the colors of which are
 incorporated with the melted glass in the pot.
 --Knight.
 
 Pot plant (Bot.), either of the trees which bear the
 monkey-pot.
 
 Pot wheel (Hydraul.), a noria.
 
 To go to pot, to go to destruction; to come to an end of
 usefulness; to become refuse. [Colloq.] --Dryden. --J. G.
 Saxe.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to rack (gcide)
 | Rack \Rack\, n. [See Wreck.] A wreck; destruction. [Obs., except in a few phrases.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Rack and ruin, destruction; utter ruin. [Colloq.]
 
 To go to rack, to perish; to be destroyed. [Colloq.] "All
 goes to rack." --Pepys.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to sea (gcide)
 | Sea \Sea\ (s[=e]), n. [OE. see, AS. s[=ae]; akin to D. zee, OS. & OHG. s[=e]o, G. see, OFries. se, Dan. s["o], Sw. sj["o],
 Icel. saer, Goth. saiws, and perhaps to L. saevus fierce,
 savage. [root]151a.]
 1. One of the larger bodies of salt water, less than an
 ocean, found on the earth's surface; a body of salt water
 of second rank, generally forming part of, or connecting
 with, an ocean or a larger sea; as, the Mediterranean Sea;
 the Sea of Marmora; the North Sea; the Carribean Sea.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. An inland body of water, esp. if large or if salt or
 brackish; as, the Caspian Sea; the Sea of Aral; sometimes,
 a small fresh-water lake; as, the Sea of Galilee.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. The ocean; the whole body of the salt water which covers a
 large part of the globe.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I marvel how the fishes live in the sea. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Ambiguous between sea and land
 The river horse and scaly crocodile.  --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. The swell of the ocean or other body of water in a high
 wind; motion or agitation of the water's surface; also, a
 single wave; a billow; as, there was a high sea after the
 storm; the vessel shipped a sea.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. (Jewish Antiq.) A great brazen laver in the temple at
 Jerusalem; -- so called from its size.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He made a molten sea of ten cubits from brim to
 brim, round in compass, and five cubits the height
 thereof.                              --2 Chron. iv.
 2.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. Fig.: Anything resembling the sea in vastness; as, a sea
 of glory. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 All the space . . . was one sea of heads.
 --Macaulay.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Sea is often used in the composition of words of
 obvious signification; as, sea-bathed, sea-beaten,
 sea-bound, sea-bred, sea-circled, sealike, sea-nursed,
 sea-tossed, sea-walled, sea-worn, and the like. It is
 also used either adjectively or in combination with
 substantives; as, sea bird, sea-bird, or seabird, sea
 acorn, or sea-acorn.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 At sea, upon the ocean; away from land; figuratively,
 without landmarks for guidance; lost; at the mercy of
 circumstances. "To say the old man was at sea would be too
 feeble an expression." --G. W. Cable
 
 At full sea at the height of flood tide; hence, at the
 height. "But now God's mercy was at full sea." --Jer.
 Taylor.
 
 Beyond seas, or Beyond the sea or Beyond the seas
 (Law), out of the state, territory, realm, or country.
 --Wharton.
 
 Half seas over, half drunk. [Colloq.] --Spectator.
 
 Heavy sea, a sea in which the waves run high.
 
 Long sea, a sea characterized by the uniform and steady
 motion of long and extensive waves.
 
 Short sea, a sea in which the waves are short, broken, and
 irregular, so as to produce a tumbling or jerking motion.
 
 
 To go to sea, to adopt the calling or occupation of a
 sailor.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to the bottom (gcide)
 | Bottom \Bot"tom\ (b[o^]t"t[u^]m), n. [OE. botum, botme, AS. botm; akin to OS. bodom, D. bodem, OHG. podam, G. boden,
 Icel. botn, Sw. botten, Dan. bund (for budn), L. fundus (for
 fudnus), Gr. pyqmh`n (for fyqmh`n), Skr. budhna (for
 bhudhna), and Ir. bonn sole of the foot, W. bon stem, base.
 [root]257. Cf. 4th Found, Fund, n.]
 1. The lowest part of anything; the foot; as, the bottom of a
 tree or well; the bottom of a hill, a lane, or a page.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Or dive into the bottom of the deep.  --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. The part of anything which is beneath the contents and
 supports them, as the part of a chair on which a person
 sits, the circular base or lower head of a cask or tub, or
 the plank floor of a ship's hold; the under surface.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Barrels with the bottom knocked out.  --Macaulay.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 No two chairs were alike; such high backs and low
 backs and leather bottoms and worsted bottoms. --W.
 Irving.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. That upon which anything rests or is founded, in a literal
 or a figurative sense; foundation; groundwork.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. The bed of a body of water, as of a river, lake, sea.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. The fundament; the buttocks.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. An abyss. [Obs.] --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. Low land formed by alluvial deposits along a river;
 low-lying ground; a dale; a valley. "The bottoms and the
 high grounds." --Stoddard.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. (Naut.) The part of a ship which is ordinarily under
 water; hence, the vessel itself; a ship.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 My ventures are not in one bottom trusted. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Not to sell the teas, but to return them to London
 in the
 same bottoms in which they were shipped. --Bancroft.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Full bottom, a hull of such shape as permits carrying a
 large amount of merchandise.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. Power of endurance; as, a horse of a good bottom.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 10. Dregs or grounds; lees; sediment. --Johnson.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 At bottom, At the bottom, at the foundation or basis; in
 reality. "He was at the bottom a good man." --J. F.
 Cooper.
 
 To be at the bottom of, to be the cause or originator of;
 to be the source of. [Usually in an opprobrious sense.]
 --J. H. Newman.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He was at the bottom of many excellent counsels.
 --Addison.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To go to the bottom, to sink; esp. to be wrecked.
 
 To touch bottom, to reach the lowest point; to find
 something on which to rest.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to the dogs (gcide)
 | Dog \Dog\ (d[add]g or d[o^]g), n. [AS. docga; akin to D. dog mastiff, Dan. dogge, Sw. dogg.]
 1. (Zool.) A quadruped of the genus Canis, esp. the
 domestic dog (Canis familiaris).
 
 Note: The dog is distinguished above all others of the
 inferior animals for intelligence, docility, and
 attachment to man. There are numerous carefully bred
 varieties, as the akita, beagle, bloodhound,
 bulldog, coachdog, collie, Danish dog,
 foxhound, greyhound, mastiff, pointer,
 poodle, St. Bernard, setter, spaniel, spitz,
 terrier, German shepherd, pit bull, Chihuahua,
 etc. There are also many mixed breeds, and partially
 domesticated varieties, as well as wild dogs, like the
 dingo and dhole. (See these names in the Vocabulary.)
 [1913 Webster +PJC]
 
 2. A mean, worthless fellow; a wretch.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 What is thy servant, which is but a dog, that he
 should do this great thing?           -- 2 Kings
 viii. 13 (Rev.
 Ver. )
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. A fellow; -- used humorously or contemptuously; as, a sly
 dog; a lazy dog. [Colloq.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. (Astron.) One of the two constellations, Canis Major and
 Canis Minor, or the Greater Dog and the Lesser Dog. Canis
 Major contains the Dog Star (Sirius).
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. An iron for holding wood in a fireplace; a firedog; an
 andiron.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. (Mech.)
 (a) A grappling iron, with a claw or claws, for fastening
 into wood or other heavy articles, for the purpose of
 raising or moving them.
 (b) An iron with fangs fastening a log in a saw pit, or on
 the carriage of a sawmill.
 (c) A piece in machinery acting as a catch or clutch;
 especially, the carrier of a lathe, also, an
 adjustable stop to change motion, as in a machine
 tool.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. an ugly or crude person, especially an ugly woman. [slang]
 [PJC]
 
 8. a hot dog. [slang]
 [PJC]
 
 Note: Dog is used adjectively or in composition, commonly in
 the sense of relating to, or characteristic of, a dog.
 It is also used to denote a male; as, dog fox or g-fox,
 a male fox; dog otter or dog-otter, dog wolf, etc.; --
 also to denote a thing of cheap or mean quality; as,
 dog Latin.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 A dead dog, a thing of no use or value. --1 Sam. xxiv. 14.
 
 A dog in the manger, an ugly-natured person who prevents
 others from enjoying what would be an advantage to them
 but is none to him.
 
 Dog ape (Zool.), a male ape.
 
 Dog cabbage, or Dog's cabbage (Bot.), a succulent herb,
 native to the Mediterranean region ({Thelygonum
 Cynocrambe}).
 
 Dog cheap, very cheap. See under Cheap.
 
 Dog ear (Arch.), an acroterium. [Colloq.]
 
 Dog flea (Zool.), a species of flea (Pulex canis) which
 infests dogs and cats, and is often troublesome to man. In
 America it is the common flea. See Flea, and
 Aphaniptera.
 
 Dog grass (Bot.), a grass (Triticum caninum) of the same
 genus as wheat.
 
 Dog Latin, barbarous Latin; as, the dog Latin of pharmacy.
 
 
 Dog lichen (Bot.), a kind of lichen (Peltigera canina)
 growing on earth, rocks, and tree trunks, -- a lobed
 expansion, dingy green above and whitish with fuscous
 veins beneath.
 
 Dog louse (Zool.), a louse that infests the dog, esp.
 H[ae]matopinus piliferus; another species is
 Trichodectes latus.
 
 Dog power, a machine operated by the weight of a dog
 traveling in a drum, or on an endless track, as for
 churning.
 
 Dog salmon (Zool.), a salmon of northwest America and
 northern Asia; -- the gorbuscha; -- called also holia,
 and hone.
 
 Dog shark. (Zool.) See Dogfish.
 
 Dog's meat, meat fit only for dogs; refuse; offal.
 
 Dog Star. See in the Vocabulary.
 
 Dog wheat (Bot.), Dog grass.
 
 Dog whelk (Zool.), any species of univalve shells of the
 family Nassid[ae], esp. the Nassa reticulata of
 England.
 
 To give to the dogs, or To throw to the dogs, to throw
 away as useless. "Throw physic to the dogs; I'll none of
 it." --Shak.
 
 To go to the dogs, to go to ruin; to be ruined.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to the wall (gcide)
 | Wall \Wall\, n. [AS. weall, from L. vallum a wall, vallus a stake, pale, palisade; akin to Gr. ? a nail. Cf. Interval.]
 [1913 Webster]
 1. A work or structure of stone, brick, or other materials,
 raised to some height, and intended for defense or
 security, solid and permanent inclosing fence, as around a
 field, a park, a town, etc., also, one of the upright
 inclosing parts of a building or a room.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The plaster of the wall of the King's palace. --Dan.
 v. 5.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. A defense; a rampart; a means of protection; in the
 plural, fortifications, in general; works for defense.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The waters were a wall unto them on their right
 hand, and on their left.              --Ex. xiv. 22.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 In such a night,
 Troilus, methinks, mounted the Troyan walls. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To rush undaunted to defend the walls. --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. An inclosing part of a receptacle or vessel; as, the walls
 of a steam-engine cylinder.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. (Mining)
 (a) The side of a level or drift.
 (b) The country rock bounding a vein laterally. --Raymond.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Wall is often used adjectively, and also in the
 formation of compounds, usually of obvious
 signification; as in wall paper, or wall-paper; wall
 fruit, or wall-fruit; wallflower, etc.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Blank wall, Blind wall, etc. See under Blank, Blind,
 etc.
 
 To drive to the wall, to bring to extremities; to push to
 extremes; to get the advantage of, or mastery over.
 
 To go to the wall, to be hard pressed or driven; to be the
 weaker party; to be pushed to extremes.
 
 To take the wall. to take the inner side of a walk, that
 is, the side next the wall; hence, to take the precedence.
 "I will take the wall of any man or maid of Montague's."
 --Shak.
 
 Wall barley (Bot.), a kind of grass (Hordeum murinum)
 much resembling barley; squirrel grass. See under
 Squirrel.
 
 Wall box. (Mach.) See Wall frame, below.
 
 Wall creeper (Zool.), a small bright-colored bird
 (Tichodroma muraria) native of Asia and Southern Europe.
 It climbs about over old walls and cliffs in search of
 insects and spiders. Its body is ash-gray above, the wing
 coverts are carmine-red, the primary quills are mostly red
 at the base and black distally, some of them with white
 spots, and the tail is blackish. Called also {spider
 catcher}.
 
 Wall cress (Bot.), a name given to several low cruciferous
 herbs, especially to the mouse-ear cress. See under
 Mouse-ear.
 
 Wall frame (Mach.), a frame set in a wall to receive a
 pillow block or bearing for a shaft passing through the
 wall; -- called also wall box.
 
 Wall fruit, fruit borne by trees trained against a wall.
 
 Wall gecko (Zool.), any one of several species of Old World
 geckos which live in or about buildings and run over the
 vertical surfaces of walls, to which they cling by means
 of suckers on the feet.
 
 Wall lizard (Zool.), a common European lizard ({Lacerta
 muralis}) which frequents houses, and lives in the chinks
 and crevices of walls; -- called also wall newt.
 
 Wall louse, a wood louse.
 
 Wall moss (Bot.), any species of moss growing on walls.
 
 Wall newt (Zool.), the wall lizard. --Shak.
 
 Wall paper, paper for covering the walls of rooms; paper
 hangings.
 
 Wall pellitory (Bot.), a European plant ({Parictaria
 officinalis}) growing on old walls, and formerly esteemed
 medicinal.
 
 Wall pennywort (Bot.), a plant (Cotyledon Umbilicus)
 having rounded fleshy leaves. It is found on walls in
 Western Europe.
 
 Wall pepper (Bot.), a low mosslike plant (Sedum acre)
 with small fleshy leaves having a pungent taste and
 bearing yellow flowers. It is common on walls and rocks in
 Europe, and is sometimes seen in America.
 
 Wall pie (Bot.), a kind of fern; wall rue.
 
 Wall piece, a gun planted on a wall. --H. L. Scott.
 
 Wall plate (Arch.), a piece of timber placed horizontally
 upon a wall, and supporting posts, joists, and the like.
 See Illust. of Roof.
 
 Wall rock, granular limestone used in building walls. [U.
 S.] --Bartlett.
 
 Wall rue (Bot.), a species of small fern ({Asplenium
 Ruta-muraria}) growing on walls, rocks, and the like.
 
 Wall spring, a spring of water issuing from stratified
 rocks.
 
 Wall tent, a tent with upright cloth sides corresponding to
 the walls of a house.
 
 Wall wasp (Zool.), a common European solitary wasp
 (Odynerus parietus) which makes its nest in the crevices
 of walls.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to the world (gcide)
 | World \World\, n. [OE. world, werld, weorld, weoreld, AS. weorold, worold; akin to OS. werold, D. wereld, OHG. weralt,
 worolt, werolt, werlt, G. welt, Icel. ver["o]ld, Sw. verld,
 Dan. verden; properly, the age of man, lifetime, humanity;
 AS. wer a man + a word akin to E. old; cf. AS. yld lifetime,
 age, ylde men, humanity. Cf. Werewolf, Old.]
 [1913 Webster]
 1. The earth and the surrounding heavens; the creation; the
 system of created things; existent creation; the universe.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The invisible things of him from the creation of the
 world are clearly seen.               --Rom. 1. 20.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 With desire to know,
 What nearer might concern him, how this world
 Of heaven and earth conspicuous first began.
 --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. Any planet or heavenly body, especially when considered as
 inhabited, and as the scene of interests analogous with
 human interests; as, a plurality of worlds. "Lord of the
 worlds above." --I. Watts.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Amongst innumerable stars, that shone
 Star distant, but high-hand seemed other worlds.
 --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 There may be other worlds, where the inhabitants
 have never violated their allegiance to their
 almighty Sovereign.                   --W. B.
 Sprague.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. The earth and its inhabitants, with their concerns; the
 sum of human affairs and interests.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 That forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
 Brought death into the world, and all our woe.
 --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. In a more restricted sense, that part of the earth and its
 concerns which is known to any one, or contemplated by any
 one; a division of the globe, or of its inhabitants; human
 affairs as seen from a certain position, or from a given
 point of view; also, state of existence; scene of life and
 action; as, the Old World; the New World; the religious
 world; the Catholic world; the upper world; the future
 world; the heathen world.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 One of the greatest in the Christian world
 Shall be my surety.                   --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Murmuring that now they must be put to make war
 beyond the world's end -- for so they counted
 Britain.                              --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. The customs, practices, and interests of men; general
 affairs of life; human society; public affairs and
 occupations; as, a knowledge of the world.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Happy is she that from the world retires. --Waller.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 If knowledge of the world makes man perfidious,
 May Juba ever live in ignorance.      --Addison.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. Individual experience of, or concern with, life; course of
 life; sum of the affairs which affect the individual; as,
 to begin the world with no property; to lose all, and
 begin the world anew.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. The inhabitants of the earth; the human race; people in
 general; the public; mankind.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Since I do purpose to marry, I will think nothing to
 any purpose that the world can say against it.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Tell me, wench, how will the world repute me
 For undertaking so unstaid a journey? --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. The earth and its affairs as distinguished from heaven;
 concerns of this life as distinguished from those of the
 life to come; the present existence and its interests;
 hence, secular affairs; engrossment or absorption in the
 affairs of this life; worldly corruption; the ungodly or
 wicked part of mankind.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I pray not for the world, but for them which thou
 hast given me; for they are thine.    --John xvii.
 9.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Love not the world, neither the things that are in
 the world. If any man love the world, the love of
 the Father is not in him. For all that is in the
 world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the
 eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father,
 but is of the world.                  --1 John ii.
 15, 16.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. As an emblem of immensity, a great multitude or quantity;
 a large number. "A world of men." --Chapman. "A world of
 blossoms for the bee." --Bryant.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Nor doth this wood lack worlds of company. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 A world of woes dispatched in little space.
 --Dryden.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 All . . . in the world, all that exists; all that is
 possible; as, all the precaution in the world would not
 save him.
 
 A world to see, a wonder to see; something admirable or
 surprising to see. [Obs.]
 [1913 Webster]
 
 O, you are novices; 't is a world to see
 How tame, when men and women are alone,
 A meacock wretch can make the curstest shrew.
 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 For all the world.
 (a) Precisely; exactly.
 (b) For any consideration.
 
 Seven wonders of the world. See in the Dictionary of Noted
 Names in Fiction.
 
 To go to the world, to be married. [Obs.] "Thus goes every
 one to the world but I . . .; I may sit in a corner and
 cry heighho for a husband!" --Shak.
 
 World's end, the end, or most distant part, of the world;
 the remotest regions.
 
 World without end, eternally; forever; everlastingly; as if
 in a state of existence having no end.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Throughout all ages, world without end. --Eph. iii.
 21.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | To go to work (gcide)
 | Work \Work\ (w[^u]rk), n. [OE. work, werk, weorc, AS. weorc, worc; akin to OFries. werk, wirk, OS., D., & G. werk, OHG.
 werc, werah, Icel. & Sw. verk, Dan. v[ae]rk, Goth.
 gawa['u]rki, Gr. 'e`rgon, [digamma]e`rgon, work, "re`zein to
 do, 'o`rganon an instrument, 'o`rgia secret rites, Zend verez
 to work. [root]145. Cf. Bulwark, Energy, Erg,
 Georgic, Liturgy, Metallurgy, Organ, Orgy,
 Surgeon, Wright.]
 [1913 Webster]
 1. Exertion of strength or faculties; physical or
 intellectual effort directed to an end; industrial
 activity; toil; employment; sometimes, specifically,
 physical labor.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Man hath his daily work of body or mind
 Appointed.                            --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. The matter on which one is at work; that upon which one
 spends labor; material for working upon; subject of
 exertion; the thing occupying one; business; duty; as, to
 take up one's work; to drop one's work.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Come on, Nerissa; I have work in hand
 That you yet know not of.             --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 In every work that he began . . . he did it with all
 his heart, and prospered.             --2 Chron.
 xxxi. 21.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. That which is produced as the result of labor; anything
 accomplished by exertion or toil; product; performance;
 fabric; manufacture; in a more general sense, act, deed,
 service, effect, result, achievement, feat.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 To leave no rubs or blotches in the work. --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The work some praise,
 And some the architect.               --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Fancy . . .
 Wild work produces oft, and most in dreams.
 --Milton.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The composition or dissolution of mixed bodies . . .
 is the chief work of elements.        --Sir K.
 Digby.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. Specifically:
 (a) That which is produced by mental labor; a composition;
 a book; as, a work, or the works, of Addison.
 (b) Flowers, figures, or the like, wrought with the
 needle; embroidery.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 I am glad I have found this napkin; . . .
 I'll have the work ta'en out,
 And give 't Iago.                 --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 (c) pl. Structures in civil, military, or naval
 engineering, as docks, bridges, embankments, trenches,
 fortifications, and the like; also, the structures and
 grounds of a manufacturing establishment; as, iron
 works; locomotive works; gas works.
 (d) pl. The moving parts of a mechanism; as, the works of
 a watch.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. Manner of working; management; treatment; as, unskillful
 work spoiled the effect. --Bp. Stillingfleet.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. (Mech.) The causing of motion against a resisting force.
 The amount of work is proportioned to, and is measured by,
 the product of the force into the amount of motion along
 the direction of the force. See Conservation of energy,
 under Conservation, Unit of work, under Unit, also
 Foot pound, Horse power, Poundal, and Erg.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Energy is the capacity of doing work . . . Work is
 the transference of energy from one system to
 another.                              --Clerk
 Maxwell.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. (Mining) Ore before it is dressed. --Raymond.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 8. pl. (Script.) Performance of moral duties; righteous
 conduct.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 He shall reward every man according to his works.
 --Matt. xvi.
 27.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Faith, if it hath not works, is dead. --James ii.
 17.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 9. (Cricket) Break; twist. [Cant]
 [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
 
 10. (Mech.) The causing of motion against a resisting force,
 measured by the product of the force into the component
 of the motion resolved along the direction of the force.
 
 Energy is the capacity of doing work. . . . Work is
 the transference of energy from one system to
 another.                             --Clerk
 Maxwell.
 [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
 
 11. (Mining) Ore before it is dressed.
 [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
 
 Muscular work (Physiol.), the work done by a muscle through
 the power of contraction.
 
 To go to work, to begin laboring; to commence operations;
 to contrive; to manage. "I 'll go another way to work with
 him." --Shak.
 
 To set on work, to cause to begin laboring; to set to work.
 [Obs.] --Hooker.
 
 To set to work, to employ; to cause to engage in any
 business or labor.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | go to (wn)
 | go to v 1: be present at (meetings, church services, university),
 etc.; "She attends class regularly"; "I rarely attend
 services at my church"; "did you go to the meeting?" [syn:
 attend, go to] [ant: miss]
 |  | go to bed (wn)
 | go to bed v 1: prepare for sleep; "I usually turn in at midnight"; "He
 goes to bed at the crack of dawn" [syn: go to bed, {turn
 in}, bed, crawl in, kip down, hit the hay, {hit the
 sack}, sack out, go to sleep, retire] [ant: arise,
 get up, rise, turn out, uprise]
 |  | go to pieces (wn)
 | go to pieces v 1: lose one's emotional or mental composure; "She fell apart
 when her only child died" [syn: fall apart, {go to
 pieces}]
 |  | go to pot (wn)
 | go to pot v 1: become ruined; "His business went to pot when economy
 soured" [syn: go to pot, go to the dogs]
 |  | go to sleep (wn)
 | go to sleep v 1: prepare for sleep; "I usually turn in at midnight"; "He
 goes to bed at the crack of dawn" [syn: go to bed, {turn
 in}, bed, crawl in, kip down, hit the hay, {hit the
 sack}, sack out, go to sleep, retire] [ant: arise,
 get up, rise, turn out, uprise]
 |  | go to the dogs (wn)
 | go to the dogs v 1: become ruined; "His business went to pot when economy
 soured" [syn: go to pot, go to the dogs]
 |  | go to war (wn)
 | go to war v 1: commence hostilities [syn: go to war, take arms, {take
 up arms}]
 | 
 |