NOUN
-
the time at which something is supposed to begin
they got an early start
she knew from the get-go that he was the man for her
How To Use get-go In A Sentence
- Our components quit, break rather easily, or are often faulty from the get-go.
- We establish open book costing right from the get-go and ask suppliers to provide detailed cost breakdowns.
- Scary, sexy and addictive from the get-go, the hour-long series seems set to feed on the Buffy theme of a quippy teen dealing with extraordinary abilities — in this case, the gift of serious facial hair and the fingernails of a hobo — while flipping the script by making Scott the prey and his crush's daddy the slayer-in-waiting. Watercooler: Teen Wolf Is Howlingly Fun
- The unyielding criticism from those who opposed stimulus from the get-go — laissez-faire economists, Congressional Republicans, German leaders — plays a role, too.
- I understand that you don't wish to take an hypnoanalysis training at this point, but it seems a lot more cost effective to go to a competent practitioner and deal with it at the get-go than to screw around looking for processes to get to causes . . . especially since you may not even need to get to the cause so to speak in order to approach this particular issue, whatever it is. Hypnoanalysis . . . . . . a query with some thoughts
- In most cases, it's best just to turn off the comment feature from the get-go.
- As entertaining as it is educational, Daddy grabs you from the get-go with its description of Adam Tyler, a charismatic architect, who zooms into our lives in his tomato-red beamer, fresh from three months in the Amazon where he built both a hospital for the poor and his smooth caramel chest. One Sexy Daddy (link roundup)
- The majority of folks know bigotry when they see it, and this quarrel is pretty ludicrous from the get-go. Sanford accused of smear campaign against Bauer
- On the follow-up, it just sounds perfect from the get-go.
- This bit of illogic makes Focus hard to swallow from the get-go.