forego
English edit
Pronunciation edit
- (US) IPA(key): /fɔɹˈɡoʊ/
- (UK) IPA(key): /fɔːˈɡəʊ/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- Rhymes: -əʊ
- Homophone: forgo
Etymology 1 edit
From Middle English forgan, from Old English foregān, equivalent to fore- + go.
Verb edit
forego (third-person singular simple present foregoes, present participle foregoing, simple past forewent, past participle foregone)
- To precede, to go before.
- 1815, William Wordsworth, Methought I saw:
- pleasing remembrance of a thought foregone
Usage notes edit
- The sense to precede is usually found in the form of the participles foregone (especially in the phrase "a foregone conclusion") and foregoing (usually used either attributively, as in "the foregoing discussion", or substantively, as in "subject to the foregoing").
Synonyms edit
- antecede, come before; see also Thesaurus:precede
Translations edit
precede — see precede
Etymology 2 edit
See forgo
Verb edit
forego (third-person singular simple present foregoes, present participle foregoing, simple past forewent, past participle foregone)
- Alternative spelling of forgo; to abandon, to relinquish
- Febraury 1762, T. Waller, “The White Witch of the Wood, or the Devil of Broxbon”, in The Beauties of all the Magazines Selected, for the Year 1762, volume I, page 34:
- […] for on no other terms does she desire a reconciliation, but will sooner forego all the hopes to which her birth entitles her, and get her bread by service, than ever yield to become the wife of the ——.
Usage notes edit
- Many writers prefer the spelling forgo for this sense, on the grounds that it avoids ambiguity with forego "to precede", especially in aspects such as "forgoing"/"foregoing" and "forgone"/"foregone".
References edit
- “forego”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
- “forego”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.