Each week here at the Australian Writers’ Centre, we dissect and discuss, contort and retort, ask and gasp at the English language and all its rules, regulations and ridiculousness. It’s a celebration of language, masquerading as a passive-aggressive whinge about words and weirdness. This week, it's all systems GO…
Q: Hi AWC, how’s it going?
A: Good thanks. We’re busy with new and existing courses to help writers to achiev—- Ahhh, um. Why are there people everywhere here?
Q: Yeah, I was going to say. Found them loitering outside. Turns out our Q&A is a good hiding place for Pokémons, and this new Pokémon Go app has them coming from all around.
A: Oh, well that explains it.
Q: What’s that famous saying? “Build a Pokémon app, and they will come…”
A: Not quite. But surely we can’t talk about Pokémon this week. It’ll look a bit strange in a few months when the fad has worn out and someone stumbles upon our column in the archives.
Q: Good point. Oh, but they’re so cute. What’s the name of the yellow one pictured above that likes to peek at you?
A: Pikachu?
Q: Ah yes.
A: Actually, steering this sinking ship towards grammar for a moment, we see “peak” (highest point) and “peek” (quick look) mixed up a lot. Especially in “sneak peak” – this is incorrect and should be “sneak peek”.
Q: What if the mountain climber doesn’t want anyone to know that she climbed all the way to the top?
A: Okay, sure, that would indeed be a “sneak peak”!
Q: Excellent. So, in honour of this Pokémon Go craze sweeping the globe, I thought we could actually discuss the word “go”.
A: Let’s get going then. It’s primarily a verb, assigned to first/second person views and plurals (e.g. “I go”, “you go”, “they go” and “Go-go dancers go” etc).
Q: So what’s the go with using it as a noun?
A: This is an informal thing and primarily happens outside the US – places like Australia, New Zealand, Britain etc. So we’d say that we can’t wait to “have a go” at something (a turn) or that we’ll give something “a go” (an attempt).
Q: Americans don’t use it as a noun? Go figure!
A: Yes, “go figure” is one they DO say though – a kind of confused disbelief at something.
Q: And “goes”?
A: That has a specific job – present tense, third person singular. So “Sam goes to the gym” or “the weights machine goes all the way up to 200kg”.
Q: And in conversation? Kylie Mole style?
A: Yes good point. The verb forms “go” and “goes” here in Australia evolved in the 1970s-80s to also mean “say”. So we had the Kylie Mole character in the late 1980s saying “she goes, she goes” etc.
Q: But wh–
A: We d—
Q: No, you go.
A: Thanks. Casual conversation may be okay, but we don’t recommend using “go” or “goes” as replacements for “say” and “said” when writing.
Q: Any other forms of “go” hiding anywhere?
A: It can be used as an adjective – like in “all systems go”.
Q: Nice. So, from the get-go, I’ve wondered about how “go” pairs with prepositions a lot.
A: First, “get-go” (meaning “the very beginning”) originated in America too. As for partners in crime, “go/goes” does love teaming up with prepositions such as “with” (“Eliza’s hat goes with everything”) or “on” (“the hat goes on my head”), “in”, “off”, “through” etc.
Q: Sounds like that’s Eliza’s “go-to” hat.
A: “Go-to” is another American combo, meaning a person or thing that is a reliable source. You could say our weekly Q&A chats are your go-to source of grammar knowledge.
Q: Nah, I’d never say that…
A: “Go/goes” also teams up with adjectives. So you’d “go crazy” thinking that you’re going to “go bald” some day. Or you’d have an animal that “goes wild”.
Q: I’m always worried about that when I go camping.
A: Wild animals?
Q: No. Going bald. I wish I had Eliza’s hat that goes with everything… Just one final thing.
A: Go ahead.
Q: You have a Vaporeon right behind you. A very rare Pokémon!
A: Okay, there's a few hundred people heading this way. It’s time to go.
Do you have a grammar gripe or punctuation puzzle that you’d like our Q&A to explore this year? Email it to us today!