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Latest comment: 13 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
(Response to a compliment.) I'm not sure how to phrase this. Is it short for "Go on with your lies!" (or foolishness, etc.)? Meant ironically in an effort to stop the compliments. A special case of Sense 2. Outdated or at least old-fashioned. DanwWiki14:33, 7 September 2010 (UTC)Reply
sense: To travel by means of; go by. Usex: In order to get to town, I decided to go on the bus .
Clearly "on the bus" is an adjunct prepositional phrase and go on is not a phrasal verb in this case. There may be other phrasal-verb senses missing. DCDuringTALK03:28, 23 June 2011 (UTC)Reply
I had the same thought when I recently made some edits to this entry. I think it should be deleted. It's just "go" in its usual sense plus "on" in its usual sense, not a special use of the combination "go on". 86.176.211.23013:48, 24 June 2011 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 11 years ago11 comments6 people in discussion
rfd-sense: To use and adopt (information) in order to understand an issue, make a decision, etc.
We can't go on what this map says; it's twenty years out of date.
I didn't make a decision because I didn't have anything to go on.
This is (deprecated template usage)go (or other senses) with a prepositional phrase. That is exactly what a phrasal verb is not. In many cases the prepositional phrase could be headed by with or by with similar meaning.
In addition, there is nothing special about information. We can't go on one tankful of gas.We can't go on a cup of coffee and a piece of toast.DCDuringTALK15:48, 18 August 2012 (UTC)Reply
Keep, MacMillan defines it as "to base an opinion or decision on something" and IMO you can't get to "base an opinion or decision" from "go". The police had nothing to go on after a master criminal stole their toilets. Siuenti (talk) 16:19, 18 August 2012 (UTC)Reply
I think this definition of go on is unduly specific. I don't think that go on is limited to "information". To me it seems that any kind of material supply, information, or even emotional support could follow the preposition/particle on.
Consider non-information as complement of on:
He's going on just a half charge of his cell phone. He'll never make it.
Why do you think you could go on a piece of toast and a cup of coffee?
I agree with DCDuring and would add that "go from" can also be used this way. With that in mind, this seems like it is indeed merely another sense of the word "go". bd2412T04:30, 19 August 2012 (UTC)Reply
Those examples seem strange to me, without context I would interpret them as referring to actual movement. On the other hand, if a duration was added ("go the whole morning on a piece of toast") I would interpret them as meaning "endure", but that's a very different sense from "make deductions". Siuenti (talk) 20:04, 20 August 2012 (UTC)Reply
What does He's going on just a half charge of his cell phone. He'll never make it. mean? Is this charge meant as charge of the battery? If so, I don't think this necessarily refers to some movement. --BiblbroXдискашн21:04, 20 August 2012 (UTC)Reply
@Siuenti: Go is a wonderfully flexible word that can be used to mean almost anything that can be viewed literally or metaphorically as a journey. But it is a light verb, so it seems to need some kind of supplementation to heavy it up, like the temporal "all morning" or a locative or a particle.
The usage examples don't seem strange to me, though all morning is a good addition.
He's going on just a half charge of his cell phone. He'll never make it.going = "proceed through his 'day'/'morning'/'journey between recharging points'".
I don't think we should go on his word.go = "proceed"
I think that the solution of adding meanings to go doesn't work because the putative prepositional phrases can't survive some transformations with meaning intact.
He went on a hunch - *On a hunch he went. - *It is on a hunch that he is going.
Similarly:
We can go on his word. - *On his word we can go. - *It is on his word that we can go.
If this is true, I wonder how many senses we might need to add to ].
The first usage example in the challenged definition does not well illustrate a phrasal verb go on as it is ambiguous. It can easily be read as go (journey, proceed, travel, depart) + PP. The negative-valenced usage examples, though natural enough, add semantic complications to transformational tests, it seems to me. DCDuringTALK21:32, 20 August 2012 (UTC)Reply
Keep. Which of the other senses of go on is supposed to cover this meaning? It seems entirely separate from all of them to me. SpinningSpark19:08, 5 July 2013 (UTC)Reply