Not sure, but it could be (like so many expressions) from Shakespeare. In Julius Caesar :
Brutus:
There is a tide in the affairs of men.
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat,
And we must take the current when it serves,
Or lose our ventures.
Julius Caesar Act 4, scene 3, 218-224
The phrase "go with the flow" originated from the philosophy of Taoism, which emphasizes living in harmony with the natural course of events. The exact person who said it cannot be attributed to one specific individual, as it is a concept that has been discussed and practiced by many Taoist philosophers throughout history.
The phrase "anuugacchati pravaha" is in Sanskrit. It translates to "follow the flow" in English.
The phrase "go said" does not make any sense, and does not occur in the Bible.
Turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1695, originally nautical.
The phrase first appeared in the mid-1960s in African-American slang, and "get-go" is simply a transformation of the verbal phrase "get going" into a noun form meaning "the starting point, the beginning." Subsequent mutations include "from the git-go" and "from the get (or git)."
Turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1695, originally nautical.
The phrase "from around" typically means from various places or sources, indicating a broad or diverse origin.
The phrase originates from the time in history when hangings were a very common occurence. When there was a lack of entertainment, the townspeople would go 'out' to watch a hanging. From then on, the phrase "hanging out" became part of of the common vernacular.
When driving a porsche parrallel with the creek, on your third go around of passing the same cat, he tires of you. At that point, said cat will scurry along quickly with his tail high in the air. Thus, he is high tailing it out of there. Boom.
A phrase for After really depends on where u use it for example if u said after i go skating it would b later, when she wuz done skating.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant the mode or the fashion. "This is all the go," said the cowboy.
The first recorded use of the phrase was in a letter Roosevelt wrote to Henry Sprague in 1900. Roosevelt claimed the phrase to be of West African origin, but there is no corroborative evidence of that. It is possible that he coined the phrase and made up the derivation.
"Bom de bom go non" does not have a known meaning or origin. It may be a made-up or nonsensical phrase.