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Phrase(s): go down
1. to sink below a normal or expected level or height. • The plane went down in flames. • The ship went down with all hands aboard. 2. to descend to a lower measurement. • Her fever went down. • The price of the stock went down yesterday. 3. to be swallowed. • The medicine went down without any trouble at all. • The pill I took simply would not go down. 4. to fall or drop down, as when struck or injured. • Sam went down when he was struck on the chin. • The deer went down when it was hit with the arrow. 5. Sl. to happen. • Hey, man! What’s going down? • Something strange is going down around here. 6. Sl. to be accepted. • We’ll just have to wait awhile to see how all this goes down. • The proposal didn’t go down very well with the manager. 7. Sl. to be arrested. (Underworld.) • Lefty didn’t want to go down for a crime he didn’t do. • Mr. Big said that somebody had to go down for it, and he didn’t care who., Phrase(s): go down something
to descend something; to fall down something. • She went down the ladder very carefully. • I did not want to go down those steep stairs.
McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs
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1. Descend to a lower level; drop below the horizon, fall to the ground, or sink. For example, Don't let the baby go down the stairs alone, or The sun went down behind the hill, or I was afraid the plane would go down, or The ship went down and all hands were lost. [c. 1300] 2. Experience defeat or ruin, as in They went down fighting, or The boxer went down in the first round. [Late 1500s] 3. Decrease, subside, as in After Christmas prices will go down, or As soon as the swelling goes down it won't hurt as much. [Second half of 1600s] 4. Be swallowed, as in This huge pill just won't go down, or Your wine goes down very smoothly. [Second half of 1500s] 5. Be accepted or believed, as in How did your speech at the convention go down? When it takes an object, it is put as go down with, as in It's hardly the truth but it still goes down with many voters. [c. 1600] 6. Also, go down in history. Be recorded or remembered, as in This event must go down in her book as one of the highlights of the year, or This debate will go down in history. [Late 1800s] 7. Occur, take place, as in Really crazy behavior was going down in the sixties. [Slang; mid-1900s] Also see COME DOWN, def. 4. 8. Be sent to prison, as in He went down for a five-year term. [Slang; c. 1900] 9. In the game of bridge, fail to fulfill one's contract (that is, take fewer than the required number of tricks), as in We had bid four hearts and the bad distribution made us go down. [Early 1900s] Also see the subsequent idioms beginning with GO DOWN.
American Heritage Idioms