go away phrasal verb (
see also go)
1. to leave a place or person:
Go away and leave me alone!
I went away wondering if I’d said the wrong thing.2. to travel to a place and spend some time there, for example for a holiday:
Are you going away this year?go away for
We’re going away for the weekend.go away to
He’s going away to college next year.go away on
I’m going away on a business trip next week.3. if a problem, unpleasant feeling etc goes away, it disappears:
Ignoring the crime problem won’t make it go away. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
disappear if something disappears, you cannot see it any longer, or it does not exist any longer:
The sun slowly disappeared over the horizon.
Millions of people saw their savings disappear.
16% of the forest cover has disappeared during the last 100 years.vanish to completely disappear, especially suddenly:
The boat vanished without trace off the coast of Australia.
All hopes of finding the boy alive have vanished.
The fields have vanished beneath a new town of skyscrapers and motorways.go away to stop existing – used about something bad such as a pain or a problem:
I wish this headache would go away.
I’m afraid the problem won’t just go away.fade away to gradually become less clear, strong, or bright, and finally disappear:
Her voice began to fade away.
His anger slowly faded away.
The last rays of the evening sun were fading away.melt away especially literary to disappear, especially gradually – used about feelings or groups of people:
The crowd began to melt away.
His initial excitement had melted away.die out to stop existing after gradually becoming more and more rare – used about a type of animal or plant, a disease, or a custom:
Wolves had died out in much of Europe.
Many of the old childhood diseases have almost died out.become extinct if a type of animal or plant becomes extinct, it stops existing:
Dinosaurs became extinct millions of years ago.
If nothing is done to save the whales, they will soon become extinct. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲