GO THROUGH


Meaning of GO THROUGH in English

1.

If you go through an experience or a period of time, especially an unpleasant or difficult one, you experience it.

He was going through a very difficult time...

South Africa was going through a period of irreversible change.

PHRASAL VERB : V P n , V P n

2.

If you go through a lot of things such as papers or clothes, you look at them, usually in order to sort them into groups or to search for a particular item.

It was evident that someone had gone through my possessions.

PHRASAL VERB : V P n

3.

If you go through a list, story, or plan, you read or check it from beginning to end.

Going through his list of customers is a massive job.

PHRASAL VERB : V P n

4.

When someone goes through a routine, procedure, or series of actions, they perform it in the way they usually do.

Every night, they go through the same routine: he throws open the bedroom window, she closes it.

PHRASAL VERB : V P n

5.

If a law, agreement, or official decision goes through , it is approved by a parliament or committee.

The bill might have gone through if the economy was growing.

= get through

PHRASAL VERB : V P

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary.      Английский словарь Коллинз COBUILD для изучающих язык на продвинутом уровне.