Go forth
verb (intransitive, adverb) (archaic or formal)
1.
to be issued: the command went forth that taxes should be collected
2.
to go out: the army went forth to battle
Read Also:
- Go for the fences
verb phrase To try to make long base hits, esp home runs; slug (1970s+ Baseball)
- Go for the gold
verb phrase To strive for the highest reward; go for broke: Everything else looks real. They were going for the gold/ Any time Hollywood goes for the gold there are bound to be contestants that finish dead last [1980s+; fr the gold medal awarded to the first-place finisher in Olympic competitions]
- Go for the long ball
verb phrase To take a large risk for a large gain; go for broke: entering the fall campaign, might decide to go for the long ball [fr football 1970s+; fr a long pass, the ”bomb,” thrown in a football game]
- Go-forward
noun 1. forward momentum, esp of a sports team during a match
- Go fuck oneself
sentence May you be accursed, confounded, humiliated, rejected, etc; go to hell: Oh, go fuck yourself, Stern/ Ah, go impale yourselves, the bunch of you verb phrase : If people were only interested in it ’cause she balled Paul McCartney ”then they could go fuck themselves” (1960s+)