go (1 current till about 1800)
1.
to walk, move
on foot at an ordinary pace Tp. III. ii. 23,
Gent. III. i. 391
“going will scarce serve
thy turn,”
IV. ii. 20
“love Will creep . . .
where it cannot go,”
1H4 II. iii. 88, 2H4 II. iv. 178,
Lr. I. iv. 135
“Ride more than thou
goest,”
Sonn. cxxx. 11.
2.
used in the
imperative as a rebuke or remonstrance
MND. III. ii. 259
“you are a tame man,
go!,”
H5 V. i. 73,
Rom. I. v. 90
“You are a princox;
go.”

