On the go= busy and active/ while travelling or not at home

Ashraful Haque

Senior Member
Joined
May 14, 2019
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Bengali; Bangla
Home Country
Bangladesh
Current Location
Bangladesh
According to Cambridge dictionary the two meanings of 'on the go' are 'busy and active' and 'while travelling or not at home.'

1) I carry resistance bands with me while traveling so I can workout no matter where I am.
Can I say I carry resistance bands so I can workout on the go?

2) If a person is very busy and always working can I say the following?
"Dany is always on the go. It's hard to get his appointment.
 
According to Cambridge dictionary the two meanings of 'on the go' are 'busy and active' and 'while travelling or not at home.'
Those are two of the meanings. There are more.
1) I carry resistance bands with me while traveling so I can workout no matter where I am.
Can I say I carry resistance bands so I can workout on the go?
It's OK although it does rather sound as if you're going to work out while physically travelling (for example, you're going to use your resistance bands while you're on the bus).
2) If a person is very busy and always working can I say the following?
"Danny is always on the go. It's hard to get his an appointment with him.
That doesn't really work. It doesn't contain the idea that he's specifically very busy at work. It sounds as if his entire life is very busy but that's mostly irrelevant to trying to get an appointment with him. (I assume he's a doctor/dentist/masseur/osteopath/chiropractor/bank manager/lawyer or similar. If not, I don't think "appointment" is necessarily the right word.)
 
Those are two of the meanings. There are more.

It's OK although it does rather sound as if you're going to work out while physically travelling (for example, you're going to use your resistance bands while you're on the bus).

That doesn't really work. It doesn't contain the idea that he's specifically very busy at work. It sounds as if his entire life is very busy but that's mostly irrelevant to trying to get an appointment with him. (I assume he's a doctor/dentist/masseur/osteopath/chiropractor/bank manager/lawyer or similar. If not, I don't think "appointment" is necessarily the right word.)
I think I'm better off not using the idiom at all. I don't want to get the wrong message across.
 
I am familiar with the phrase "always on the go". That means to me that they are quite busy although it doesn't necessarily mean they're always working.
 
I am familiar with the phrase "always on the go". That means to me that they are quite busy although it doesn't necessarily mean they're always working.
I have a friend who doesn't really do anything because he's got a rich father, but always acts like he is the busiest person ever. Can I say 'he acts like he's always on the go even though he isn't'?
 
Back
Top