going

A departure.

Adjective

  1. Likely to continue; viable.
    • He didn't want to make an unsecured loan to the business because it didn't look like a going concern.
  2. Current, prevailing.
    • The going rate for manual snow-shoveling is $25 an hour.
  3. Available.
    • He has the easiest job going.
    • Craig: Did you look at Tudor life? did you do a lot of studying about that? Natalie: Yeah, I was really geeky about it, I read every single book that was going. - 2013, Natalie Dormer, interview on, The Late Late Show...

Origin

Verb form from Middle English goinge, goynge, gayng, variants of gonde, goonde, gaand, from Old English gānde, from Proto-Germanic *gēndz, present participle of Proto-Germanic *gēną, *gāną (“to go”), equivalent to go + -ing. Cognate with West Frisian geanend (“going”), Dutch gaand (“going”), German gehend (“going”), Danish gående (“going”), Swedish gående (“going”). Noun and adjective from Middle English going, goyng, gaing, gayng, equivalent to go + -ing. Compare German Gehung, Old English gang (“a going”). More at gang.

Hyponyms

aforegoing artgoing balletgoing beachgoing chapelgoing churchgoing cinemagoing clubgoing concertgoing congoing dancegoing downgoing easygoing evergoing fairgoing fargoing fastgoing filmgoing forthgoing homegoing ingoing mosque-going moviegoing museumgoing

Related

going to

Noun

  1. A departure.
    • Māna-Yood-Sushāī was before the beginning of the gods, and shall be after their going. […] After the going of the gods there will be no small worlds nor big. - 1905, Lord Dunsany [i.e., Edward Plunkett, 18th Baron of...
    • But he found it strange to think […] of all these little things that cluster round the comings, and the stayings, and the goings, that he would know nothing of them, nothing of what they had been, as long as he lived,...
  2. The suitability of ground for riding, walking etc.
    • The going was very difficult over the ice.
  3. Progress.
    • We made good going for a while, but then we came to the price.
  4. Conditions for advancing in any way.
    • Not only were the streets not paved with gold, but the going was difficult for an immigrant.
  5. Course of life; behaviour; doings; ways.
    • His eyes are upon the ways of man, and he seeth all his goings. - 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], →OCLC, Job 34:21:
  6. The whereabouts (of something).
    • I can't find my sunglasses; you haven't seen the going of them, have you?
  7. The horizontal distance between the front of one step in a flight of stairs and the front of the next.
    • Each step had a rise of 170 mm and a going of 250 mm.

Forms

goings

Derived

hard going going, going, gone good going nice going

Verb

  1. present participle and gerund of go
    • I'm afraid I must be going.
  2. Attending or visiting (a stated event, place, etc.) habitually or regularly.
    • theatre-going, church-going, movie-going

Wikipedia

going