goest - Master This Word
Master this word with our 5-step learning method – Learn English in English
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This page helps you stop memorizing isolated translations and start understanding a word through its shared mental image, native-style thinking, and practical training steps.
Master this word with our 5-step learning method – Learn English in English
Example sentences are the start of understanding. Don't rush to memorize. First feel how the word works in a sentence.
go: root - 'gā' meaning 'to walk, to come, to go' (Old English) → related to travel and movement, imagine a vast landscape and a path leading you forward.
Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.
Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.
Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible InputStarting with a slow breath, I place my hand on the door and push. The door gives a little, my weight shifts, and I step through. That small motion becomes a choice: keep going, adjust my pace, and go. In that moment, going becomes how I handle tasks, conversations, and new days.
Go is one of English's most versatile verbs, used to indicate movement from place to place, to describe progression or departure, and to express functioning or operation. It covers a wide range of meanings: go somewhere, go ahead, go well, go on, go out of fashion, and even in idioms like go for it or go with it. Learners often confuse go with come, stay, or travel, and misplace particles like 'go up' vs 'go into' or phrasal verbs that require go with prepositions. Understanding go also involves recognizing its tense forms, modal uses, and its ability to form continuous or future constructions with almost any main verb. Context matters for choosing the right sense.
For English learners, go is highly polysemous and appears in many phrasal verbs and idioms. Learners often treat it as a simple movement verb and mix it with come or travel, or misuse prepositions with go-phrases. Emphasis on context helps distinguish movement, progression, and operation senses.
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