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  1. Aug 2, 2021 · Written in the group’s upper eastside New York City home apartment, “She’s Gone” was inspired by real heartbreak and buoyed by the comradery of deep friendship that’s often needed to get over a...

    • Jacob Uitti
    • Senior Writer
    • what does 'she's gone' mean today1
    • what does 'she's gone' mean today2
    • what does 'she's gone' mean today3
    • what does 'she's gone' mean today4
  2. Oct 28, 2012 · She has gone to the temple. This is idiom: it is irregular and only applies to very few verbs. And is gone can still be used with specific directions sometimes, though it is probably rare. The opposite has gone without direction doesn't sound wrong, but it is probably less frequent.

  3. May 7, 2020 · This is a little confusing; you can tell from the context; "to be gone" means to be have disappeared" or to have gone away" but also "to be dead"; here, obviously it's the first choice (she has diappeared or she went away) (to be gone vs to have gone).

  4. We form the present perfect simple of go with: Subject + have/has + been/gone. to New York. to the supermarket. We usually use short forms (I've, You've, He's, She's, We've, They've) when we are speaking and in informal writing.

  5. Feb 4, 2008 · She is gone = she's no longer here. She has gone = she has left. Same result but with a slight shift of emphasis. I might be more likely to say she has gone, when the subject is she because I'd want to emphasize the fact that she went away, that she left me (if that were the context).

  6. "She's gone", has to be in context to make sense. You just found that out! It could mean: She could not wait and left before you arrived. It could mean: She has left your relationship. It could mean: She's dead. It could mean: She left the building/country/city -- any place.

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  8. Apr 28, 2017 · It is the usual use of have to form a perfect tense with the verb go. You can therefore use it to say where something has "gone". In this case, the verbs "moved" or "travelled" are often fairly synonymous with "gone". E.g. She has gone to the shops - She has travelled to the shops. X is/are gone.

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