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  1. go home; go here; go there; Use go with directions. go in/inside; go up; go aft; go downtown 1; Use go to with places or static events. go to school; go to the cinema; go to a wedding; The question of when you use the definite/indefinite/no article is separate and covered in other questions. Use go on with journeys. go on a cruise; go on a hike ...

  2. I just found a couple of examples for a question. Originally I got stuck when I was translating the following sentence: "We had heard this story about lost gold from a Gold Rush-era robbery, and we wanted to go up there.". But there was no mention about "up" or "north" before. And I was misunderstood why there was used "go up". –

  3. Mar 15, 2012 · Now, as regards conditionals, I'm with you.And though some (emphasis on some) AmE speakers say "If I would go there", I surely do not. In fact, if you listen to some speakers (even a British journalist interviewing Kushner said just today: Do you wish you didn't do x for hadn't done x), who consistently replace would with simple past, you realize they are screwing up the idea of past possibility.

  4. Nov 18, 2016 · Go straight past the traffic lights. Go straight there. *Go straight directly. (right modifying adverb, ungrammatical) Preposition phrases can freely postmodify nouns, adverbs usually cannot: that dog in the window; that dog there; that dog cutely (adverb postmodifying noun, ungrammatical) We can usually use the adverb very to modify adverbs.

  5. Jan 25, 2012 · If you are presently at the location, then use "come" (as in: While sitting at a cafe in Rome drinking espresso "I would love to come back next year." or alternatively, "Excuse me, can you come over here"). But, if you are not presently at the location, to use "go" (as in: "Will you go over there." or "Hawai'i? I would love to go there.").

  6. to go on foot: to walk as opposed to ‘ride.’ (OED) and, according to Oxford Dictionaries. to go on/by foot: walking rather than travelling by car or using other transport. This explains why the singular form is used. 3. Are there instances when the expression by foot is preferred?

  7. Jun 9, 2012 · "go to golf/chess club/rugby practice etc" tends to imply going along to an 'organised event' that happens on a regular basis. So saying "go to shopping" doesn't usually make sense, because it implies that there is an organised 'event' called "shopping" that you go to regularly, and that's not usually the case with shopping.

  8. Apr 13, 2015 · Inverted Y/N questions take Do-Support if there's no auxiliary (He went => Did he go?) Y/N questions have rising intonation at the end (symbolized by a question mark in writing) So the rule for forming a Y/N question is: If there isn't an auxiliary, insert do and change the main verb to an infinitive form.

  9. @SvenYargs To me the expressions "Here we go again" and "There you go again" are almost the first and second person equivalents of each other. In the the first case the speaker is expressing frustration with the fact that the group is being placed in a difficult situation or being subjected to an oft-repeated rant by a boss or politician.

  10. Sep 17, 2012 · There we go. This phrase can also be said in a multitude of situations in any type of mood: When you have been struggling to figure out a math problem and you finally get it! You can say, satisfied: "There we go" Or say you are watching a home video of yourself and some friends and you all run into the ocean. You might say to a friend: "There ...

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