Definify.com
Definition 2024
go_back
go back
See also: goback
English
Verb
go back (third-person singular simple present goes back, present participle going back, simple past went back, past participle gone back)
- (intransitive) To return to a place after having been there at a previous time.
- 1909, Archibald Marshall, The Squire's Daughter, chapterI:
- He tried to persuade Cicely to stay away from the ball-room for a fourth dance. […] But she said she must go back, and when they joined the crowd again […] she found her mother standing up before the seat on which she had sat all the evening searching anxiously for her with her eyes, and her father by her side.
- 1909, Archibald Marshall, The Squire's Daughter, chapterI:
- (intransitive, of two or more persons) To have known each other for a certain length of time.
- Bill and I go back to college.
- (intransitive, used with "on") To abandon, desert, betray or fail someone or something.
- You promised me that you'd pay up today, no going back on your word.
Usage notes
- (return): Go back is used chiefly when talking about returning to a place where the speaker is not presently located. Otherwise come back is more common.
Translations
to return to a place
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to have known each other
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to abandon, desert, betray or fail someone or something