English
editVerb
editgo to show (third-person singular simple present goes to show, present participle going to show, simple past went to show, past participle gone to show)
- (set phrase) To provide an effective example that demonstrates a point; to prove.
- 1877, Anthony Trollope, chapter 10, in The Life of Cicero:
- [A]ll the evidence that we have goes to show that he spoke the truth.
- 1971, Jagger–Richards, Marianne Faithfull (lyrics and music), “Sister Morphine”, in Sticky Fingers, performed by The Rolling Stones:
- Well, it just goes to show things are not what they seem / Please, Sister Morphine, turn my nightmare into dreams
- 1978 July 16, Robert Palmer, “Tom Petty and Heartbreakers In Rock Show at the Palladium”, in New York Times, retrieved 13 June 2018:
- Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, who were at the Palladium Friday night, don't fit comfortably into any of the stylistic niches invented by rock writers. […] All of which goes to show that the current rock scene remains chaotic.
- 2015 June 11, Karen DeYoung, “As an Iran deal nears, the lobbying, pro and con, intensifies”, in Washington Post, retrieved 13 June 2018:
- “The numbers just go to show — once again — that pundits and presumed communal representatives are flat-out wrong in assuming American Jews are hawkish on Iran.”
References
edit- “it just goes to show”, in Collins English Dictionary.
- “it shows goes to show” (US) / “it shows goes to show” (UK) in Macmillan English Dictionary.
- “go to show/prove”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.