Learn English – What does “go” here mean

meaning-in-context

"it could be. Madame 's got a gallery somewhere filled with stuff by students from when they were tiny. Suppose two people come up and say they're in love. She can find the art they've done over years and years. She can see if they go. If they match. Don't forget, Kath, what she's got reveals our souls. She could decide for herself what's a good match and what's just a stupid crush."

A passage form Never Let Me Go. Does it means if they(the Madame people) can go to check the arts? or if they(the lovers) are really in love?

Best Answer

I think "go" here is an abbreviated version of "go together". "Go together" is an idiom meaning "are well-suited to each other", "are compatible", or "make a good pair". You might say, "This lamp and this chair go together" meaning that you think the styles of each are such that they are attractive when placed next to each other. We often say that two people "go together" meaning that we think that they make a good couple. (Perhaps I should clarify that we also say "those two people go together" meaning that they are involved in a dating relationship, which phrase, I think, has totally different origins but ends up being a closely-related idea. The two ideas go together. :-)

The word "go" can have other meanings that would fit here, like "work", as in, "Does this car go?" meaning, "Does it work correctly, does the engine run, etc.?" But the next sentence is "If they match", so I think the writer is stating the same idea in two different ways for emphasis, "If they go [together]. If they match."

Related Topic