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Mitgehen

Mitgehen is a German verb meaning to go with someone, to accompany, or to join in doing something. It combines mit- (together) with gehen (to go). The primary sense is physical accompaniment: you go to a place together with another person.

In addition to literal movement, mitgehen is used figuratively to express agreement or solidarity with a proposal,

Grammar and forms: mitgehen is a separable-prefix verb. In main clauses, the prefix is typically separated and

Common related verbs include mitkommen (to come along) and begleiten (to accompany). The past participle of mitgehen

This overview covers core meaning, figurative use, and basic grammar, helping distinguish mitgehen from closely related

plan,
or
sentiment.
For
example,
ich
kann
dem
Vorschlag
nicht
mitgehen
means
“I
can’t
go
along
with
the
proposal.”
It
can
also
convey
sharing
someone’s
feelings
or
concerns
in
a
given
situation,
similar
to
sympathizing
with
them.
appears
after
the
finite
verb:
ich
gehe
heute
mit.
In
subordinate
clauses
or
with
inflected
modal
verbs,
the
infinitive
remains
mitgehen:
ich
möchte
mitgehen,
er
kann
dem
Plan
nicht
mitgehen.
For
completed
movement
or
action,
the
auxiliary
verb
is
sein:
ich
bin
mitgegangen.
is
mitgegangen.
Typical
collocations
include
going
along
with
a
plan,
accompanying
someone,
or
expressing
willingness
to
participate.
verbs
and
clarifying
its
separable-prefix
behavior
in
different
tenses
and
moods.