of Go, of Wend, imp. & p. p. of Wend; -- now obsolete except as the imperfect of go, with which it has no etymological connection. See Go., Course; way; path; journey; direction.
No, the verb 'went' in the sentence 'I went home' is intransitive because it does not require a direct object to complete its meaning.
They are asking how things went, how the situation progressed.
meaning:- Regardless of, in defiance ofeg:"went shopping inspite of the bad weather"Synonyms:despite and notwithstanding
Guess it meant you went to bed.....a 'berth', a small sleeping area like in a train.
Here today, gone tomorrow.
It means you sweat like you have just went for a swim!
"Went by crook or by shank" is an idiomatic expression meaning to take a more difficult or less direct route to get somewhere. It implies doing something in a roundabout or unconventional way.
Both are correct with ever so slightly different meaning.
If you are meaning tonight then it was trayc and john in the bottom two and john went out hope that helps :):):)):):)
The sentence "I went to a friend's house" is correct, meaning you traveled there. Another synonym is that you "visited" your friend.
It means you sweat like you have just went for a swim!
You would use the phrase Went off when talking about perishables that have gone bad or past their use by date