Silence, maybe? Once you speak, it's no longer silent.
The past participle of "go" is "gone." The past participle of "speak" is "spoken."
It means they have gone to heaven so to speak, to God.
"Where have you gone?" is a question asking for the current location of the person being addressed. It is seeking information about where they are at that moment.
"Atm" stands for "at the moment".
speak, gone with the wind
Like many languages, English is a language that is fairly easy to speak very well. Perfectly? - I doubt that anybody speaks English perfectly! But seriously, languages are always evolving, so it is impossible to say what is 'perfect' at any given moment.
I don't believe that either of those statements is true.
The adverb is always, it is an adverb of frequency
I think, no matter where you are going, if you are going to be gone on an expensive vacation, it is always worth it to get travel insurance. Bad things can happen at the last moment, and it would be nice to have your money back if need be.
그 순간에 당신과 함께 갇혀
when i went on vacation and my dog of 13 years died while i was gone
Not always.