to continue doing something
to continue to happen or develop
to travel somewhere with someone else
Almost any teenage boy will tell you that when a pretty girl shows interest, he will always go along.
And what better reason to go along and look?
As a resident representative, he invited me to go along and see for myself.
But I also suspect he was fed up with all the upset to hospital routine that inevitably goes along with these visits.
Everything was going along just fine until she turned up!
Go along and see what your local branch has to offer, perhaps armed with an idea of what you can offer it, too.
Going along with something you're not happy with could wreck your relationship for good.
He’s going to York tomorrow and I think I might just go along too.
I've seen aircraft going along and suddenly they'd just come down.
It is unusual to have an actual house in Chelsea, so we went along to look at it.
It was not something I personally went along with.
It's always just gone along with what we've been doing.
One insider told us: 'It all went along perfectly nicely for a while.
Perhaps women should go along and see for themselves?
So let's see what happens as we go along.
The teacher seemed to be making up the lesson as he went along.
To save time and work, it's helpful to think ahead as you go along.
We had been playing and going along well enough but the results suggested otherwise: eight games with six tough results and close games we could have won.
We really, truly have always gone along being happy if a gig sells out.
We're under the radar but going along well.
Which has me thinking that going along just to look couldn't hurt, could it?
Which is why I agreed to go along to see this counsellor of his.
You find out more about people in adversity than when you are going along well.
You go along to see this and you get inspired.
goes along
going along
went along
gone along
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
Was this page helpful?