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If you want to go fast, go alone, but if you want to go further, go together.
♪ You and I, we go together ♪
Are you always experimenting with your food or mixing things that don't usually go together?
Are you always experimenting with your food or mixing things that don't usually go together?
and then we've got past tense coming together, like this: they don't go together.
They don't go together.
I felt like we looked like two cartoon characters of ourselves because we don't go together, but we go perfectly together.
I felt like we looked like two cartoon characters of ourselves because we don't go together,
But she didn't, would have, they go together, in the past, you can't change it.
"But she didn't" would have... they go together.
Or if they're mad, if their eyebrows go together like this, that means they're kind of angry with what you're saying, which is not necessarily a bad thing, it just means that it's their emotion.
If their eyebrows go together like this, that means they're kind of angry with what you're saying, which is not necessarily a bad thing.
Yeah, together, of course we've got to go together.
Of course, we're going to go together.
Now, this may be a little bit of a stretch, but Mamdani's primary win is being seen as a seismic moment for the left, and a stunning upset against the Democratic party establishment by younger, more progressive Democrats like Mamdani, about whom Senator Bernie Sanders said, You run a strong grassroots campaign around progressive agenda that go together.
You run a strong grassroots campaign around a progressive agenda that go together.
So, you've got "come up" and "with" there, and they do go together, so be sure to put them together when you use this phrasal verb.
And they do go together, so be sure to put them together when you use this phrasal verb.