go over
๐ Pronunciation
/ษกษส หษสvษ(r)/
Stress: primary stress on particle
particle 'over' often reduced in continuous speech
๐จโ๐ฉโ๐งโ๐ฆ Word Family
| Word Class | Forms |
|---|---|
| Verbs | go over, goes over, went over, gone over, going over |
| Nouns | going-over |
Limited derivational morphology compared to other phrasal verbs
๐ Phrasal Verb Structure
Base verb: goParticle: over
Transitivity: both
๐ Meanings
Meaning 1
examine or review something carefully
Formal equivalent: review, examine
ABSTRACT
“Let's go over the contract before signing it”
“The teacher went over the homework with the class”
“I need to go over my notes before the exam”
Meaning 2
physically move across or above something
Formal equivalent: cross, traverse
LITERAL
“The cat went over the fence”
“We'll need to go over the bridge”
“The plane went over the mountain”
Meaning 3
repeat or practice something
Formal equivalent: rehearse, practice
ABSTRACT
“Let's go over the presentation one more time”
“She went over her lines before the play”
“We should go over the emergency procedures”
โ ๏ธ Separability Rules
Rule: INSEPARABLE
Pronoun Placement
โ go over it
โ went over them
โ go it over
๐ก Think of it Like This
Imagine moving across a surface while examining every part, like scanning a document line by line
Memory aid: Think of physically moving over something to inspect it thoroughly
Reflects methodical Western approach to review and examination
๐ Usage Patterns
Grammatical Contexts
Imperative: “Go over your work before submitting it”
Continuous: “I'm going over the figures now”
Perfect: “Have you gone over the proposal?”
Passive: “The material has been gone over thoroughly”
Modal: “We should go over this again”
Question: “When will you go over the budget?”
Negative: “Don't go over the same points repeatedly”
Common in:
โ ๏ธ Common Errors
โ Let's go it overโโ Let's go over it
Attempting to separate an inseparable phrasal verb
Common for: Languages with different word order patterns
High impact
โ go through over the materialโโ go over the material
Confusion with similar phrasal verb 'go through'
โ pass over the documentโโ go over the document
Direct translation from other languages
โ going over about the topicโโ going over the topic
Unnecessary preposition addition
โ go over to the homeworkโโ go over the homework
Confusion with directional 'go over to'
๐ Register & Alternatives
Formality: neutral
Single-verb alternatives
Formal: examine, review, analyze
Neutral: check, study
Informal: look at, check out
Use phrasal verb: everyday conversation, business meetings, classroom settings
Use single verb: formal academic writing, legal documents
๐ Etymology
Origin: Combination of 'go' (Old English 'gan') and 'over' (Old English 'ofer')