gone in Germany
gone [gɔn] fort, gegangen, verbraucht, verlore
Sentence patterns related to "gone"
1. What's gone is gone.
2. Gone was the vagueness, gone the composure.
3. • Gone was the vagueness, gone the Composure
4. "He's gone, he's gone," Michael Blubbed
5. 2 Gone was the vagueness, gone the composure.
6. Now gone!
7. Batteries gone.
8. They're gone.
9. 18 Presently the port was gone and the fire gone and Tuppe had gone to sleep in the portmanteau.
10. Alright, she's gone.
11. It's all gone.
12. “Racial Barriers Gone”
13. Everything's gone wrong.
14. Ni is gone
15. You've gone soft.
16. He's gone... crazy.
17. You've gone gray.
18. Your fever's gone.
19. She's gone now.
20. Have gone home.
21. Husk, be gone.
22. They're long gone!
23. Gone now... swept away.
24. The screen's gone blank.
25. Have you gone mad?
26. Gone with the Wind
27. Obadiah, he's gone insane.
28. My camera, it's gone.
29. The hearse is gone.
30. The accents are gone?
31. Now it was gone.
32. That condo is gone.
33. The TV's gone kaput .
34. Ago definition, gone; gone by; past (usually preceded by a noun): five days Ago
35. "Here today, gone tomorrow?
36. The sentries are gone!
37. Most are now gone.
38. Gone with the wind.
39. Kaidu has gone north.
40. Come and gone taciturnity.
41. And when she's gone...
42. His herd was gone.
43. They must be gone.
44. The bread's gone mouldy.
45. My wallet is gone.
46. They're gone, goodbye, adios.
weg, auf Wiedersehen, adios.
47. Gone With The Wind?
48. The boy is gone.
49. It is gone and you know it is gone” (“Repentance,” Ensign, May 1983, 59).
50. Cute is a word whose meaning has gone has gone through a thorough historical transformation