ongo
English
editEtymology
editVerb
editongo (third-person singular simple present ongoes, present participle ongoing, simple past onwent, past participle ongone)
- To be ongoing (occurring, happening); to last, proceed or continue.
- 1981, Colin Fletcher, The Man from the Cave, page 164:
- And it ongoes far longer than Bill had intended.
- 1987, The Hemingway Review - Volume 7, page 103:
- 1996, David Rosenberg, Communion: Contemporary Writers Reveal the Bible in Their Lives:
- In two other senses, however, the astrophysical creation story ongoes still:
- 2013, Hilde Hasselgård, Jarle Ebeling, Signe Oksefjell Ebeling, Corpus Perspectives on Patterns of Lexis, →ISBN, page 233:
- The discussion of the appropriateness of using the finite verb forms in examples (28) and (29) shows that the lexicalization process continues (or indeed “ongoes”), and it also gives some indication as to how the introduction process actually works in CMC.
Anagrams
editCebuano
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
edit- Hyphenation: o‧ngo
Noun
editongo
- nonstandard form of ungo