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| an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle. |
| a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison. |
| go up | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | (also preposition) to move or lead to or as if to a higher place or level; rise; increase: prices are always going up; the curtain goes up at eight o'clock; new buildings are going up all around us |
| 2. | to be destroyed: the house went up in flames |
| 3. | (Brit) to go or return (to college or university) at the beginning of a term or academic year |
go definition
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go up definition
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go up
Be put up, as in New buildings are going up all over town.
Rise; increase. For example, His temperature is going up at an alarming rate, or The costs of construction are going up all the time. [Late 1800s]
Also, be gone up. Be destroyed, ruined, done for; also, die, be killed. For example, If we're not back in a week, you'll know we've gone up, or In spite of our efforts, the plans for a new library are gone up. [Slang; mid-1800s]
Forget one's lines on the stage or make a mistake in performing music. For example, Don't worry, you know your part and you won't go up, or He went up in the last movement of the sonata. [Slang; 1960s] Also see the subsequent idioms beginning with go up.