go for
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]go for (third-person singular simple present goes for, present participle going for, simple past went for, past participle gone for)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see go, for.
- I'll go for some milk.
- If John goes for three days without sleep, he will be very tired.
- I need to go for a checkup at the clinic.
- Tickets are going for upwards of $100.
- (transitive) To try for, to attempt to reach.
- I'll go for the world record.
- Go for it!
- (transitive) To undertake (an action); to choose an option.
- His phone was off so I couldn't ask his permission, so I decided to just go for it.
- I'll go for a swim if it's warm enough.
- I went for the pay-as-you-go plan.
- (transitive) To attack.
- Careful, he'll go for your throat!
- (transitive) To develop a strong interest in, especially in a sudden manner; to be infatuated with.
- 2007 September 28, Graham Linehan, The IT Crowd, Season 2, Episode 6:
- Douglas: Well done on passing the test, Jen... Yes, all those clumsy attempts at seduction. Don't tell me you couldn't see through them. They were a test to find out whether you really wanted to work for me or whether you just wanted to come up here for my body.
Jen: Oh, no, no, no, no, no, not at all.
Douglas: All right.
Jen: No, physically you're just not the sort of man I go for.
Douglas: Yeah, thanks, Jen.
Jen: I go for the classically good-looking men: Blond, broad, and generally clean shaven.
Douglas: Alright, yeah, enough of the jibber-jabber!
- Douglas: Well done on passing the test, Jen... Yes, all those clumsy attempts at seduction. Don't tell me you couldn't see through them. They were a test to find out whether you really wanted to work for me or whether you just wanted to come up here for my body.
- Clyde took one look at Bonnie and really went for her.
- 2007 September 28, Graham Linehan, The IT Crowd, Season 2, Episode 6:
- (transitive) To favor, accept; to have a preference for.
- Management won't go for such a risky project now.
- Do you want to climb the mountain with me?
Yeah, I could go for that.
- 1987, “Love in the First Degree”, in Wow!, performed by Bananarama:
- And the judge and the jury
They all put the blame on me
They wouldn't go for my story
They wouldn't hear my plea
- (transitive) To apply equally to.
- Stop taking my food from the fridge! That goes for you too, Nick!
- What I'm about to say goes for all of you.
- My wife hates football, and that goes for me as well.
- (transitive) To suffice to be used for; to serve as.
- It's a desk that goes for a dresser too.
- 1503, “19 Henry VII. c. 5: Coin”, in A Collection of Statutes Connected with the General Administration of the Law[1], published 1836, page 158:
- […] every of them, being gold, whole and weight, shall go and be current in payment throughout this his realm for the sum that they were coined for.
- (intransitive) To be accepted as.
- 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], →OCLC, 1 Samuel 17:12:
- The man went among men for an old man in the days of Saul.
- (transitive, idiomatic) To cost.
- Here in Texas, gas can go for as little as two dollars a gallon.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to go somewhere in order to get something
to try for something
to attack something
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.