英 [ɡɒn] 美 [ɡɔːn]
adj. 用完的,用光的;死了的,灭绝的;离去的,不在某处的;不复存在的;<非正式>怀孕的;<非正式>神志不清的;(球越过外野围栏)成为本垒打;<美,非正式>很棒的,有灵感的;<非正式>入迷的
prep. <英>晚于,已过
v. 走,去;离开;进展 (go 的过去分词形式)
gone /ɡɒn/
Gone is the past participle of . (go)的过去分词
形容词 When someone is gone, they have left the place where you are and are no longer there. When something is gone, it is no longer present or no longer exists. 离开的; 不在的
He knows how hard it was for her while he was gone.
他知道他不在的时候她有多难。
He's already been gone four hours!
他已离开4个小时了!
dead
同义词: asleep(p) / at peace(p) / at rest(p) / deceased / departed
no longer retained
gone with the wind
在(全场比赛的特定局次)中投球
宕(指未能完成定约);吊牌
(除)得整数商,纳入(与into连用):
...,由保罗-路德和珍妮佛-安妮斯顿联手主演的《周游》(Wanderlust)、大眼美男阿曼达-塞弗里德一连惊悚蹊径的《踪迹难寻》(Gone)示意一样平常,仅位列第八、第九位。本周大盘对比上周下跌19.2%,TOP12总和为1.15亿美金。
约请逝去(Gone)的父老出门与友人聚会。这无疑(No doubt)是一种表达对恩人思索之情的步履与习性。
昨年春节,小陈(Chen)回来后发明过去和气的家曾经荡然无存(Gone):入款没了,岁的时候,喜欢疯狂地追逐。30岁的时候,只喜欢朋友式的交往。
...里可能有很大的水分,但我可以肯定的是,这样的人注定守不住财,驾驭不了财富,虽然904万大奖一经砸在他的头上,但离他远去(Gone)的日子也不会太长,这一点,在很多不善理财的大奖得主身上已经验证过了,他也不会例外。
离去的;死去的;用光的
'He's gone!' Viv echoed.
“他去了!”维夫重复道。
Alex has already gone.
亚历克斯已经走了。
Everything had gone.
一切都过去了。
Gary Dickstein, an assistant vice president at Wright State University in Dayton,Ohio, says in loco parentis is not really gone.
VOA : special.2009.07.09
Okay so exchange numbers; okay good half of that problem is gone now we have just these two left.
好,交换数字,好,问题解决一半了,只剩你们两个了。
计算机科学课程节选 : 哈佛公开课
There was this billionaire that he loved the building because it's so beautiful, and it'd gone to ruin,
曾经有个亿万富翁喜欢这个建筑,因为它太美了,还有它已经被破坏了,
SpeakingMax英语口语达人 : 万丽酒店的魅力
Controllers on the ground joked that the flight had gone so well they did not have enough to do.
VOA : special.2009.07.22
The parent organization gives Gone Rural boMake at least twenty percent of its profits and helps with administrative costs.
VOA : special.2009.05.04
This despite news of several hedge funds shutting down or losing on bets gone bad.
Mr Entwistle had said the report had gone through management and legal checks before broadcast.
Gone are the days when dining in Prague meant gawping balefully at plates of stodgy dumplings.