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go whole hog

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go

1[goh] verb, went, gone, go⋅ing, noun, plural goes, interjection, adjective
–verb (used without object)
1. to move or proceed, esp. to or from something: They're going by bus.
2. to leave a place; depart: People were coming and going all the time.
3. to keep or be in motion; function or perform as required: Can't you go any faster in your work?
4. to become as specified: to go mad.
5. to continue in a certain state or condition; be habitually: to go barefoot.
6. to act as specified: Go warily if he wants to discuss terms.
7. to act so as to come into a certain state or condition: to go into debt; to go to sleep.
8. to be known: to go by a false name.
9. to reach, extend, or give access to: Where does this door go?
10. to pass or elapse: The time went fast.
11. to be applied, allotted, awarded, transferred, etc., to a particular recipient or purpose: My money goes for food and rent.
12. to be sold: I have a bid of two dollars. Going! Going! Gone!
13. to be considered generally or usually: He's short, as basketball players go.
14. to conduce or tend: This only goes to prove the point.
15. to result or end; turn out: How did the game go?
16. to belong; have a place: This book goes on the top shelf.
17. (of colors, styles, etc.) to harmonize; be compatible; be suited: Your tweed jacket would go well with these pants.
18. to fit around or into; be able to be extended, contained, inserted, etc.: This belt won't go around my waist.
19. to be or become consumed, spent, finished, etc.: The cake went fast.
20. to be or become discarded, dismissed, put aside, forgotten, etc.: Those practical jokes of yours have got to go!
21. to develop, progress, or proceed, esp. with reference to success or satisfaction: How is your new job going?
22. to move or proceed with remarkable speed or energy: Look at that airplane go!
23. to make a certain sound: The gun goes bang.
24. to be phrased, written, or composed: How does that song go?
25. to seek or have recourse for a decision, verdict, corroboration, defense, etc.; resort: to go to court.
26. to become worn-out, weakened, ineffective, etc.: His eyesight is beginning to go.
27. to die: The old man went peacefully at 3 a.m.
28. to fail, break, or give way: The dike might go any minute.
29. to come into action; begin: Go when you hear the bell.
30. to make up a quantity or content; be requisite: Sixteen ounces go to the pound.
31. to be able to be divided; be contained as a mathematical element: Three goes into fifteen five times.
32. to contribute to an end result: the items that go to make up the total.
33. to have as one's goal; intend (usually used in the present tense, fol. by an infinitive): Their daughter is going to be a doctor.
34. to be permitted, approved, or the like: Around here, anything goes.
35. to be authoritative; be the final word: This is my house, and what I say goes!
36. to subject oneself: Don't go to any trouble.
37. (used in the infinitive as an intensifier to indicate the idea of proceeding, esp. with the expectation of serious consequences): He finally had to go ask for a loan.
38. Informal. to urinate or defecate.
–verb (used with object)
39. Informal. to endure or tolerate: I can't go his preaching.
40. Informal. to risk, pay, afford, bet, or bid: I'll go fifty dollars for a ticket, but no more.
41. to move or proceed with or according to; follow: Going my way?
42. to share or participate in to the extent of (often fol. by a complementary substantive): to go halves.
43. to yield, produce, weigh as a usable amount, or grow to: This field will go two bales of cotton.
44. to assume the obligation, responsibility, or function of: His father went bail for him.
45. Informal. to enjoy, appreciate, desire, or want: I could go a big steak dinner right now.
46. Informal. to say; declare (usually used in speech): I asked the clerk for my receipt, and he goes, “You don't need it.”
–noun
47. the act of going: the come and go of the seasons.
48. energy, spirit, or animation: a man with a lot of go.
49. a try at something; attempt: to have a go at winning the prize.
50. a successful accomplishment; success: to make a go of a new business.
51. Informal. a business agreement; deal; bargain: Thirty dollars? It's a go.
52. Informal. approval or permission, as to undertake or begin something: The boss gave us the go on the new project.
53. Boxing. a bout: the main go.
–interjection
54. (in calling the start of a race) start the race; leave the starting line: On your mark! Get set! Go!
–adjective
55. ready.
56. functioning properly: two minutes before the satellite is to be launched and all systems are go.
57. go about,
a. to occupy oneself with; perform: The shoemaker goes about his work with a smile.
b. Nautical. to change course by tacking or wearing.
58. go after, to attempt to obtain; strive for: You'll never get what you want if you don't go after it energetically.
59. go against, to be in conflict with or opposed to: It goes against the company's policy.
60. go ahead, to proceed without hesitation or delay: If you want to use my car, go ahead.
61. go along,
a. to move or proceed.
b. to accompany in travel.
c. to agree; concur: I can't go along with you on that idea.
62. go around,
a. to be often in company (often fol. by with): to go around with a bad crowd.
b. to be sufficient for all: Is there enough food to go around?
c. to pass or circulate, as in transmission or communication: The rumor is going around that he was forced to resign.
63. go at,
a. to assault; attack.
b. to begin or proceed vigorously: to go at one's work with a will.
64. go back on. back 2 (def. 7).
65. go by,
a. to be disregarded or not taken advantage of: Don't let this chance go by.
b. to be guided by or to rely upon: Don't go by what she says.
66. go down,
a. to decrease or subside, as in amount or size: Prices went down. The swelling is going down.
b. to descend or sink: When does the sun go down?
c. to suffer defeat: to go down fighting.
d. to be accepted or believed: This nonsense goes down as truth with many persons.
e. to admit of being consumed: This food goes down easily.
f. to be remembered in history or by posterity.
g. Slang. to happen; occur: What's been going down since I've been away?
h. British. to leave a university, permanently or at the end of a term.
i. Bridge. to fall short of making one's contract.
j. Slang: Vulgar. to perform fellatio or cunnilingus.
67. go for,
a. to make an attempt at; try for: He is going for the championship.
b. to assault.
c. to favor; like: It simply isn't the kind of life you would go for.
d. to be used for the purpose of or be a substitute for: material that goes for silk.
68. go in for,
a. to adopt as one's particular interest; approve of; like.
b. to occupy oneself with; engage in: Europeans in increasing numbers are going in for camping.
69. go into,
a. to discuss or investigate: Let's not go into the question of whose fault it was.
b. to undertake as one's study or work: to go into medicine.
70. go in with, to join in a partnership or union; combine with: He asked me to go in with him on the purchase of a boat.
71. go off,
a. to explode, fire, or perform or begin to function abruptly: A gun went off in the distance.
b. (of what has been expected or planned) to happen: The interview went off very badly.
c. to leave, esp. suddenly: She went off without saying goodbye.
d. to die.
e. to deteriorate.
f. Slang. to experience orgasm.
72. go on,
a. to happen or take place: What's going on here?
b. to continue: Go on working.
c. to behave; act: Don't go on like that!
d. to talk effusively; chatter.
e. (used to express disbelief): Go on, you're kidding me.
f. to appear onstage in a theatrical performance: I go on in the middle of the second act.
73. go out,
a. to come to an end, esp. to fade in popularity: Silent movies went out as soon as the talkies were perfected.
b. to cease or fail to function: The lights went out.
c. to participate in social activities, on dates, etc.
d. to take part in a strike: The printers went out yesterday in a contract dispute.
e. Rummy. to dispose of the last card in one's hand by melding it on the table.
f. Cards. to achieve a point score equal to or above the score necessary to win the game.
74. go over,
a. to repeat; review.
b. to be effective or successful: The proposal went over very well with the trustees.
c. to examine: The mechanic went over the car but found nothing wrong.
d. to read; scan.
75. go through,
a. to bear; experience.
b. to examine or search carefully: He went through all of his things but couldn't find the letter.
c. to be successful; be accepted or approved: The proposed appropriation will never go through.
d. to use up; spend completely: He went through his allowance in one day.
76. go through with, to persevere with to the end; bring to completion: It was perhaps the biggest challenge of her life, and she resolved to go through with it.
77. go under,
a. to be overwhelmed or ruined; fail.
b. (of a ship) to founder.
78. go up,
a. to be in the process of construction, as a building.
b. to increase in cost, value, etc.
c. to forget one's lines during a theatrical performance.
d. British. to go to a university at the beginning of a term.
79. from the word “go,” from the very start; since the beginning.
80. go and, to be so thoughtless, unfortunate, or silly as to: It was going to be a surprise but he went and told her.
81. go ape over or for. ape (def. 6).
82. go bananas. bananas (def. 2).
83. go down on, Slang: Vulgar. to perform fellatio or cunnilingus on.
84. go for broke. broke (def. 9).
85. go for it, Informal. to pursue a goal with determination.
86. go it alone, to act or proceed independently, without assistance, companionship, or the like: If you don't want to form a partnership, I'll go it alone.
87. go native. native (def. 18).
88. go the whole hog, to do something thoroughly or consistently: If you're getting a new amplifier, why don't you go the whole hog and get new speakers and a turntable, too?
89. go to!, Archaic.
a. you don't say! I don't believe you!
b. let's do it! come on!
90. go together,
a. to be appropriate or harmonious: The rug and curtains don't go together.
b. Informal. to keep company; date; court: They have gone together for two years.
91. go to it, Informal. to begin vigorously and at once.
92. go with, Informal. to keep company with; court; date: He went with her for two semesters. Also, go out with.
93. let go,
a. to release one's grasp or hold: Please let go of my arm.
b. to free; release.
c. to cease to employ; dismiss: Business was slack and many employees were let go.
d. to become unrestrained; abandon inhibitions: She'd be good fun if she would just let go and enjoy herself.
e. to dismiss; forget; discard: Once he has an idea, he never lets go of it.
94. let go with, to express or utter with abandon: He let go with a sudden yell.
95. let oneself go, to free oneself of inhibitions or restraint: Let yourself go and get mad once in a while.
96. no go, Informal.
a. futile; useless: We tried to get there by noon, but it was no go.
b. not authorized or approved to proceed; canceled or aborted: Tomorrow's satellite launching is no go.
97. on the go,
a. very busy; active: She's always on the go.
b. while going from place to place; while traveling.
98. to go, Informal. (of food) for consumption off the premises where sold: coffee to go.

Origin:
bef. 900; ME gon, OE gān; c. OHG gēn, G gehen


1. walk, run, travel, advance.


1. stay.

hog

[hawg, hog] noun, verb, hogged, hog⋅ging.
–noun
1. a hoofed mammal of the family Suidae, order Artiodactyla, comprising boars and swine.
2. a domesticated swine weighing 120 lb. (54 kg) or more, raised for market.
3. a selfish, gluttonous, or filthy person.
4. Slang.
a. a large, heavy motorcycle.
b. an impressively large luxury automobile.
5. Also, hogg, hogget. British.
a. a sheep about one year old that has not been shorn.
b. the wool shorn from such a sheep.
c. any of several other domestic animals, as a bullock, that are one year old.
6. Railroads Slang. a locomotive.
7. a machine for shredding wood.
8. Curling. a stone that stops before reaching the hog score.
–verb (used with object)
9. to appropriate selfishly; take more than one's share of.
10. to arch (the back) upward like that of a hog.
11. roach 3 (def. 3).
12. (in machine-shop practice) to cut deeply into (a metal bar or slab) to reduce it to a shape suitable for final machining.
13. to shred (a piece of wood).
–verb (used without object)
14. Nautical. (of a hull) to have less than the proper amount of sheer because of structural weakness; arch. Compare sag (def. 6a).
15. go the whole hog, to proceed or indulge completely and unreservedly: We went the whole hog and took a cruise around the world. Also, go whole hog.
16. live high off or on the hog, to be in prosperous circumstances. Also, eat high off the hog.

Origin:
1300–50; ME; cf. OE hogg- in place-names; perh. < Celtic; cf. Welsh hwch, Cornish hogh swine


hoglike, adjective

whole hog

–noun Informal.
1. the furthest extent; everything: With them it was whole hog or nothing.
2. go whole hog, to do something completely or thoroughly: The townspeople went whole hog for the celebration.
Also, go the whole hog.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Cultural Dictionary

go whole hog

To engage in something without reservation or constraint: “At first, the general had his doubts about the plan, but finally he decided to go whole hog.”

The American Heritage® New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Slang Dictionary
go

  1. n.
    a try (at something). : I'd like to have another go at it, if I can.
  2. in.
    to urinate. : Jimmy's gonna go in his pants!
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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hog

  1. n.
    and hog cadillac. a large car; a souped up car. (See also road hog.) : How do you like my new hog? , Where are you going to park that hog cadillac.
  2. n.
    a police officer; a pig. : The hogs are on to you.
  3. n.
    an addict who requires very large doses to sustain the habit. (Drugs.) : Ernie is turning into a hog. He just can't get enough.
  4. n.
    phencyclidine (PCP), an animal tranquilizer. (Drugs.) : We're glad to learn that the demand for hog is tapering off.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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Word Origin & History

go 
O.E. gan "to go," from W.Gmc. *gai-/*gæ- (cf. O.Fris. gan, M.Du. gaen, Ger. gehen), from PIE *ghei-, perhaps connected to Skt. jihite "goes away," Gk. kikhano "I reach, meet with," but there is not general agreement on cognates. The O.E. past tense was eode, of uncertain origin but evidently once a different word (perhaps connected to Goth. iddja); it was replaced 1400s by went, formerly past tense of wenden "to direct one's way" (see wend). In northern England and Scotland, however, eode tended to be replaced by gaed, a construction based on go. In modern Eng., only be and go take their past tenses from entirely different verbs. The word in its various forms and combinations takes up 45 columns of close print in the O.E.D. The noun sense of "a try or turn at something" is from 1825; meaning "something that goes, a success" is from 1876. Verbal meaning "say" emerged 1960s in teen slang. Going to "be about to" is from 1482. Go for broke is from 1951, Amer.Eng. colloquial; go down on "perform oral sex on" is from 1916. That goes without saying (1878) translates Fr. cela va sans dire. Phrase on the go "in constant motion" is from 1843; go-between is 1598; go-getter is 1910, Amer.Eng., but goer, with essentially the same meaning, is c.1378. Goner "something dead or about to die" is first recorded 1850.

hog 
c.1175 (implied in hogaster), "swine reared for slaughter" (usually about a year old), also used by stockmen for "young sheep" (c.1350) and for "horse older than one year," suggesting the original sense had something to do with an age, not a type of animal. Not evidenced in O.E., but it may have existed. Possibility of Celtic origin is regarded by OED as "improbable." Fig. sense of "gluttonous person" is first recorded 1436. Meaning "Harley-Davidson motorcycle" is attested from 1967. The verb meaning "to appropriate greedily" is U.S. slang from 1884 (first attested in "Huck Finn"). The verb hog-tie "bind hands and feet" is first recorded 1894. Hog in armor "awkward or clumsy person in ill-fitting attire" is from 1660. Phrase to go the whole hog (1828) is sometimes said to be from the butcher shop option of buying the whole slaughtered animal (at a discount) rather than just the choice bits. But it is perhaps rather from the story (recorded in Eng. from 1779) of Muslim sophists, forbidden by the Quran from eating a certain unnamed part of the hog, who debated which part was intended and managed to exempt the whole of it from the prohibition.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Financial Dictionary

GO

See general obligation bond.

Wall Street Words: An A to Z Guide to Investment Terms by David L. Scott.
Copyright © 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin.
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Idioms & Phrases

go whole hog

Also, go the limit. Do something completely or thoroughly; proceed as far as possible. For example, Instead of just painting the room, why not go whole hog and redecorate it completely? or Let's go the limit and dig up the entire garden. Although the precise source of whole hog is disputed, this colloquialism was first recorded in 1828 (in Japhet by Frederick Marryat) as . Today the article is usually omitted. Go the limit, also a colloquialism, dates from the mid-1900s. Also see all out.

The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
Copyright © 1997. Published by Houghton Mifflin.
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