See also: Ago, Ago., AGO, agó, aĝo, ägo, and -ago

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English ago, agon (passed), past participle of agon (to depart, escape, pass), from Old English āgān (to go away, pass away, go forth, come to pass), from Proto-Germanic *uz- (out), *gāną (to go), equivalent to a- +‎ gone. Cognate with German ergehen (to come to pass, fare, go forth). Compare also Old Saxon āgangan (to go or pass by), Gothic 𐌿𐍃𐌲𐌰𐌲𐌲𐌰𐌽 (usgaggan, to go forth).

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

ago (comparative more ago, superlative most ago)

  1. (archaic or dialectal) Gone; gone by; gone away; passed; passed away.
    in days ago/in days agone
  2. (archaic or dialectal) Nearly gone; dead (used in Devonshire at the turn of the 19th century)
    Woe the day- she is agone!

Usage notes edit

  • Usually follows the noun.

Adverb edit

ago (comparative more ago, superlative most ago)

  1. before
    When they first met in 2000, my dad told my mom how he had gotten the money. The story begins 20 years ago.

Preposition edit

ago

  1. (used postpositively) Before now.
    I got married ten years ago.

Derived terms edit

Translations edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

Anagrams edit

Albanian edit

Etymology edit

From Ottoman Turkish آغا (ağa) (compare Turkish ağa) or Greek άγιος (ágios).

Noun edit

ago m

  1. (Gheg, archaic, poetic) god

Esperanto edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Latin agō.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈaɡo/
  • Hyphenation: a‧go
  • (file)

Noun edit

ago (accusative singular agon, plural agoj, accusative plural agojn)

  1. act, action

Synonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Ido edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Latin agō.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

ago (plural agi)

  1. act, action, deed

Synonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Istriot edit

Etymology edit

From Latin acus.

Noun edit

ago m

  1. needle

Italian edit

Etymology edit

From earlier *aco, from Latin acus (needle), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eḱ- (sharp). Compare Romanian ac.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

ago m (plural aghi)

  1. needle
    • 1947, Primo Levi, “Storia di dieci giorni”, in Se questo è un uomo [If This Is a Man], Torino: Einaudi, published 1987, →ISBN, page 190:
      Grazie alla mia ormai lunga esperienza delle cose del campo; ero riuscito a portare con me le mie cose personali: una cintura di fili elettrici intrecciati; il cucchiaio-coltello; un ago con tre gugliate; cinque bottoni; e infine, diciotto pietrine per acciarino che avevo rubato in Laboratoria.
      Thanks to my by now long experience with camp-related matters; I was able to bring with me my personal items: a belt made of braided electrical wires; the spoon-knife; a needle with three threads; five buttons; and lastly, eighteen flints for the lighter that I robbed from the Laboratory.

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Anagrams edit

Japanese edit

Romanization edit

ago

  1. Rōmaji transcription of あご

Karipúna Creole French edit

Pronunciation edit

Interjection edit

ago?

  1. may I come in?

Further reading edit

  • Alfred W. Tobler (1987) Dicionário Crioulo Karipúna/Português Português/Crioulo Karípúna (in Karipúna Creole French), Summer Institute of Linguistics, page 43

Latin edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Italic *agō, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂éǵeti, from the root *h₂eǵ- (to drive)

Cognate with Old Irish aigid, Ancient Greek ἄγω (ágō, I lead), Old Norse aka (move, drive), Avestan 𐬀𐬰𐬀𐬌𐬙𐬌 (azaiti), Sanskrit अजति (ájati, to drive, propel, cast).

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

agō (present infinitive agere, perfect active ēgī, supine āctum); third conjugation

  1. to act, to behave
    • Late 4th century, Jerome [et al.], transl., edited by Roger Gryson, Biblia Sacra: Iuxta Vulgatam Versionem (Vulgate), 5th edition, Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, published 2007, →ISBN, 32:7:
      viriliter agite et confortamini nolite timere nec paveatis regem Assyriorum []
      "Act strongly and be courageous. Do not fear nor tremble before the king of Assyria"
    • 64 CE, Seneca the Younger, Epistulae morales ad Lucilium 94.6.1:
      ...doces illum quid sano faciendum sit, non efficis sanum. Pauperi ut agat divitem monstras: hoc quomodo manente paupertate fieri potest?
      ...you teach a man what a healthy man should do, but you don't make him healthy. You show the poor how to behave as a rich man: but if they remain poor, how can they do so?
  2. to do
    • c. 190 BCE – 185 BCE, Plautus, Amphitryon 2.1.1:
      [Amphitryon to Sosia:] age ī tū secundum
      Come, do follow after me!
      (literally, “Do thou walk after/following (me)!”)
    • 63 BCE, Cicero, Catiline Orations 1.8:
      Nihil agis, nihil moliris, nihil cogitas quod non ego non modo audiam sed etiam videam planeque sentiam.
      You do nothing, you plan nothing, you think of nothing which I not only do not hear, but which I do not see and know every particular of.
    • [1865, Ausonii Popmae frisii de differentiis verborum cum additamentis ab Hekelii, Richteri, Messerschmidii et Vallaurii
      Agere, Facere et Gerere hoc differunt, quod agere et corporis, et vocis, et mentis agitatum comprehendit. Facere tantum refertur ad opera, quae corpore efficimus; aliquando et pro consentire ponitur. His enim loquendi modis utebantur recte antiqui: mecum seu tecum faciam, hoc est, mecum seu tecum consentiam. Gerere est muneris et oneris...]
  3. to make (something that does not continue to exist after the maker stops)
  4. to negotiate, discuss, confer, talk with one about a person or thing
  5. to effect, accomplish, achieve
  6. to treat, to deal
  7. to act, play, perform (e.g., a role in a play)
  8. to perform, transact, conduct, manage (e.g. business, affairs)
  9. to administer, direct, guide, govern
    • 29 BCE – 19 BCE, Virgil, Aeneid 1.574:
      “Trōs Tyriusque mihī nūllō discrīmine agētur.”
      “Trojan and Tyrian shall be governed [alike], with no difference to me.” – Queen Dido
  10. to drive (sense of providing an impetus for motion), impel, move, push, put in motion
  11. to conduct, drive (sense of providing governance to motion)
    • 1877, Sophocles (in translation), Electra, in Aeschyli et Sophoclis: Tragoediae et Fragmenta (Paris: Institutiae Franciae Typographo)
      Intereā Orestēs postrēmus omnium ultimō locō equōs agēbat, in fīne certam spem victōriae ponēns.
      "Meanwhile, Orestes had been driving in last place and holding his horses back, putting his trust in the finish."
  12. to discuss, debate, deliberate (used in civil, political and legal contexts)
  13. (law) to plead
  14. to think upon; to be occupied with
    • 8 CE, Ovid, The Heroines XII.208–212:
      ingentis parturit ira minas. / Quo feret ira, sequar! facti fortasse pigebit — / Et piget infido consuluisse viro. / Viderit ista deus, qui nunc mea pectora versat! / Nescio quid certe mens mea maius agit!
      Tremndous anger abounds with threat. / I’ll follow where anger carries me. Perhaps I’ll regret my deeds: / I regret having given thought to the interests of an unfaithful husband. / Let the god see to that, which churns within my heart. / Assuredly, I don't know what occupies my mind more greatly!
  15. to aim at, to get at (generally in the subjunctive mood and preceded by ut, and so meaning: "that to might achieve...")
  16. to stir up, excite, cause, induce
  17. to disturb, agitate, vex
  18. to lead, drive (e.g., livestock)
  19. to chase, pursue
  20. to drive at, pursue (a course of action)
  21. to rob, steal, plunder, carry off
  22. (of time) to pass, spend, lead
  23. (of offerings) to slay, kill (as a sacrifice)
  24. (of plants) to put forth, sprout, extend
  25. (law) to hold (a court)
  26. (passive voice) to go on, to take place, to be at issue

Usage notes edit

Ago renders a sense of doing or making which is continuative or behavioral. For a sense of a specific instance or occasion of doing or making, see facio. For a sense of doing or making which is yet more continuative, see agito and gero.

According to Döderlein, another difference between ago and facio when they mean "make" is that ago typically has to do with making something that does not continue after the "actor" stops doing the action; whereas with facio, the object continues to exist after the maker has made the thing. In other words, ago is temporal, whereas facio is spatial.

Conjugation edit

   Conjugation of agō (third conjugation)
indicative singular plural
first second third first second third
active present agō agis agit agimus agitis agunt
imperfect agēbam agēbās agēbat agēbāmus agēbātis agēbant
future agam agēs aget agēmus agētis agent
perfect ēgī ēgistī ēgit ēgimus ēgistis ēgērunt,
ēgēre
pluperfect ēgeram ēgerās ēgerat ēgerāmus ēgerātis ēgerant
future perfect ēgerō ēgeris ēgerit ēgerimus ēgeritis ēgerint
passive present agor ageris,
agere
agitur agimur agiminī aguntur
imperfect agēbar agēbāris,
agēbāre
agēbātur agēbāmur agēbāminī agēbantur
future agar agēris,
agēre
agētur agēmur agēminī agentur
perfect āctus + present active indicative of sum
pluperfect āctus + imperfect active indicative of sum
future perfect āctus + future active indicative of sum
subjunctive singular plural
first second third first second third
active present agam agās agat agāmus agātis agant
imperfect agerem agerēs ageret agerēmus agerētis agerent
perfect ēgerim ēgerīs ēgerit ēgerīmus ēgerītis ēgerint
pluperfect ēgissem ēgissēs ēgisset ēgissēmus ēgissētis ēgissent
passive present agar agāris,
agāre
agātur agāmur agāminī agantur
imperfect agerer agerēris,
agerēre
agerētur agerēmur agerēminī agerentur
perfect āctus + present active subjunctive of sum
pluperfect āctus + imperfect active subjunctive of sum
imperative singular plural
first second third first second third
active present age agite
future agitō agitō agitōte aguntō
passive present agere agiminī
future agitor agitor aguntor
non-finite forms active passive
present perfect future present perfect future
infinitives agere ēgisse āctūrum esse agī āctum esse āctum īrī
participles agēns āctūrus āctus agendus,
agundus
verbal nouns gerund supine
genitive dative accusative ablative accusative ablative
agendī agendō agendum agendō āctum āctū

Synonyms edit

Antonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Danish: agere
  • Dutch: ageren
  • English: act
  • French: agir (see there for further descendants)
  • German: agieren
  • Ido: agar
  • Occitan: agir
  • Swedish: agera

Further reading edit

  • Walther von Wartburg (1928–2002) “agĕre”, in Französisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch (in German), volumes 24: Refonte A–Aorte, page 257
  • ago”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • ago”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • ago in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
  • Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[1], London: Macmillan and Co.
    • to take root: radices agere (De Off. 2. 12. 73)
    • to bud, blossom: gemmas agere
    • to live (all) one's life (honourably, in the country, as a man of learning): vitam, aetatem (omnem aetatem, omne aetatis tempus) agere (honeste, ruri, in litteris), degere, traducere
    • I am in my thirteenth year: tertium decimum annum ago
    • to be at one's last gasp: animam agere
    • so-and-so is in a very satisfactory position; prospers: agitur praeclare, bene cum aliquo
    • to be ruined, undone: praecipitem agi, ire
    • a man's life is at stake, is in very great danger: salus, caput, vita alicuius agitur, periclitatur, in discrimine est or versatur
    • to thank a person (in words): gratias alicui agere pro aliqua re
    • to give thanks to heaven: grates agere (dis immortalibus)
    • (ambiguous) to have all one's trouble for nothing: rem actam or simply actum agere (proverb.)
    • to be occupied with business, busy: negotia agere, gerere
    • to pass one's life in luxury and idleness: per luxum et ignaviam aetatem agere
    • to be inattentive: alias res or aliud agere
    • to devote one's life to science, study: aetatem in litteris ducere, agere
    • the point at issue: id, de quo agitur or id quod cadit in controversiam
    • to recite a poem, line with appropriate action: carmen, versum agere
    • to act a play (said of the actors): fabulam agere
    • to play the part of some one: partes agere alicuius
    • to act the rôle of a slave, pander: agere servum, lenonem
    • to represent a thing dramatically: sic exponere aliquid, quasi agatur res (non quasi narretur)
    • to gesticulate: gestum (always in the sing.) agere
    • the question now is..: nunc id quaeritur, agitur
    • to be now jesting, now in earnest: ioca et seria agere
    • the book treats of friendship: hic liber est de amicitia (not agit) or hoc libro agitur de am.
    • to act reasonably, judiciously: prudenter, considerate, consilio agere (opp. temere, nullo consilio, nulla ratione)
    • to be moderate in all things, commit no excess: omnia modice agere
    • to have no principles: omnia temere agere, nullo iudicio uti
    • to thank, glorify the immortal gods: grates, laudes agere dis immortalibus
    • to keep, celebrate a festival: diem festum agere (of an individual)
    • to take the auspices, observe the flight of birds: augurium agere, auspicari (N. D. 2. 4. 11)
    • the house walls are beginning to crack: domus rimas agit
    • to live a lonely life: vitam solitariam agere
    • how are you: quid agis?
    • what is going on? how are you getting on: quid agitur? quid fit?
    • to lay the foundations: fundamenta iacere, agere
    • to drive to pasture: pastum agere
    • to submit a formal proposition to the people: agere cum populo (Leg. 3. 4. 10)
    • the aristocracy (as a party in politics): boni cives, optimi, optimates, also simply boni (opp. improbi); illi, qui optimatium causam agunt
    • to be a leading spirit of the popular cause: populi causam agere
    • to play the demagogue: populariter agere
    • to hold the census: censum habere, agere (Liv. 3. 22)
    • to perform the censors' duties: censuram agere, gerere
    • to go to law with a person: (ex) iure, lege agere cum aliquo
    • to proceed against some one with the utmost rigour of the law; to strain the law in one's favour: summo iure agere cum aliquo (cf. summum ius, summa iniuria)
    • to convene the assizes (used of a provincial governor): conventus agere (B. G. 1. 54)
    • to conduct a person's case (said of an agent, solicitor): causam alicuius agere (apud iudicem)
    • a person's life is in jeopardy: caput alicuius agitur (vid. sect. V. 8)
    • to crucify: in crucem agere, tollere aliquem
    • to set the army in motion: agmen agere
    • to mount guard in the camp: vigilias agere in castris (Verr. 4. 43)
    • to keep watch on the rampart: custodias agere in vallo
    • to be on duty before the gates: stationes agere pro portis
    • to carry off booty: ferre atque agere praedam
    • to advance pent-houses, mantlets: vineas agere (B. G. 3. 21)
    • to make mines, subterraneous passages: cuniculos agere (B. G. 3. 21)
    • to drive the enemy before one: prae se agere hostem
    • to triumph over some one: triumphum agere de or ex aliquo or c. Gen. (victoriae, pugnae)
    • to treat with some one about peace: agere cum aliquo de pace
    • to row: navem remis agere or propellere
    • (ambiguous) I'm undone! it's all up with me: perii! actum est de me! (Ter. Ad. 3. 2. 26)
    • (ambiguous) to have all one's trouble for nothing: rem actam or simply actum agere (proverb.)
    • (ambiguous) it's all over with me; I'm a lost man: actum est de me

Lolopo edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Loloish *go¹ (Bradley). Cognate with Burmese အစ်ကို (ackui).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

ago 

  1. (Yao'an) elder brother

Maranao edit

Etymology edit

Akin to Cebuano ug.

Conjunction edit

ago

  1. and

Samoan edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Polynesian *aŋo, from Proto-Oceanic *yaŋo. Cognate with Tongan ango.

Noun edit

ago

  1. turmeric

Usage notes edit

Once cooked, it is called lega.

References edit

  • Tyron, Darell (1994) “Oceanic plant names”, in A.K. Pawley and M.D. Ross, editors, Austronesian Terminologies: Continuity and Change, Caberra, Australia: Australian National University, →ISBN, page 493

Ternate edit

Etymology edit

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

ago

  1. a kind of root crop

Further reading edit

  • Rika Hayami-Allen (2001) A descriptive study of the language of Ternate, the northern Moluccas, Indonesia, University of Pittsburgh

Võro edit

Etymology edit

Of disputed origin; cognate to Estonian agu.

Noun edit

ago (genitive ao, partitive ako)

  1. twilight

Inflection edit

Derived terms edit

Yoruba edit

Etymology 1 edit

Pronunciation edit

Interjection edit

àgò!

  1. excuse me, hello, an interjection used to get the attention of the addressee
    àgò onílé yìí o!Hello to the owners of this house!
Derived terms edit
  • kágò (to greet 'hello')
  • yàgò (move out of the way, excuse me)
Related terms edit
  • dákun (excuse me)
  • yẹra (to move out the way for someone)

Etymology 2 edit

Compare with Olukumi agó, Itsekiri ẹgó, Igala àgó, Ayere úgó (navel). Proposed to be derived from Proto-Yoruba *à-gó, from Proto-Edekiri *à-gó, ultimately from Proto-Yoruboid *à-gó. It is unclear if this word was used in Standard Yoruba as there are few texts that cite its existence in Standard Yoruba. It is possible that the word had become long obsolete in Standard Yoruba.

Alternative forms edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

àgó or agó

  1. (anatomy, Ondo, Ikalẹ, Eastern Akoko, Ọwọ) hip, waist
    Synonyms: bèbèrè ùdí, ìbàdí, ẹ̀gbẹ́, bèbè, ìgbaròkó
Coordinate terms edit