no-go
English
editAdjective
editno-go (not comparable)
- Not functioning properly.
- Of a place: not to be entered.
- They lived in a no-go part of the ghetto.
- The noise and drunkenness made the area a no-go zone at night for families.
- 2001 March 11, “Boost for local entrepreneurs.”, in Sunday Business, London, UK:
- Many of these areas have become no go for investment
- 2004 January 29, Freeman, “Deconstructing the risk business in Iraq”, in Irish Independent:
- The key resisting areas have effectively become no go
- 2010 July 2, “Jail for drug network that supplied the Swansea Valley”, in BBC News:
- Two pubs in the Pontardawe area which had previously been hubs of local social life had become "no-go" through being frequented by the gang.
- 2012, Andrew Martin, Underground Overground: A passenger's history of the Tube, Profile Books, →ISBN, page 14:
- The Great Western opened a Paddington station in 1838, a wooden terminus to the north of the present station, which would arrive in 1853. As with Euston, the site was bounded to the south by high-class property, a no-go zone for railways.
Noun
editno-go (plural no-gos or no-goes)
- Alternative form of no go