gone
动词 v.
形容词 adj.
介词 prep.
缩写
英 /ɡɒn/|/ɡɔːn/
美 /ɡɔːn/|/ɡɔn/
英文释义
动词 v.
- past participle of go
形容词 adj.
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Away, having left.
— Are they gone already?
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No longer existing, having passed.
— The days of my youth are gone.
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Used up.
— I'm afraid all the coffee is gone.
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Broken, failed.
— The bulb is gone. Can you put a new one in?
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Dead.
— Dust, that a breath could blow aside, yet that was once, like ourselves, animate with hope, passion, and sorrow, is below; around are the vain memorials of human grief and human pride; yet all alike dedicated to the gone.
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Doomed, done for.
— Have you seen the company's revenue? It's through the floor. They're gone.
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Not fully aware of one's surroundings, often through intoxication or mental decline.
— Don't bother trying to understand what Grandma says; she's gone.
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Infatuated; in love (+ on, for, in).
— I am, of course, ‘gone’ for you.
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Excellent, wonderful; crazy.
— It was a group of real gone cats.
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Ago (used post-positionally).
— Six nights gone, your brother fell upon my uncle Stafford, encamped with his host at a village called Oxcross not three days ride from Casterly Rock.
- Weak; faint; feeling a sense of goneness.
- Of an arrow: wide of the mark.
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Used with a duration to indicate for how long a process has been developing, an action has been performed or a state has persisted; especially, pregnant.
— She’s three months gone
介词 prep.
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Past, after, later than (a time).
— You'd better hurry up, it's gone four o'clock.
缩写
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Alternative spelling of gon /gon': clipping of gonna or going to.
— Take or be taken. Get yours or get got. It was the code of the streets and I'd lived by it. The way things was looking, I was prolly gone die by it too.
词源
From Middle English gon, igon, gan, ȝegan, from Old English gān, ġegān, from Proto-Germanic *gānaz (“gone”), past participle of *gāną (“to go”). Cognate with West Germanic Scots gane (“gone”), West Frisian gien (“gone”), Low German gahn (“gone”), and Dutch gegaan (“gone”).
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数据来源: Wiktionary