gone with the wind



gone with the wind

Fig. gone as if taken away by the wind. (A phrase made famous by the Margaret Mitchell novel and subsequent film Gone with the Wind. The phrase is used to make gone have a stronger force.) Everything we worked for was gone with the wind.
See also: gone, wind

gone with the wind

Disappeared, gone forever, as in With these unforeseen expenses, our profits are gone with the wind. This phrase became famous as the title of Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel, which alludes to the Civil War's causing the disappearance of a Southern way of life. It mainly serves as an intensifier of gone.
See also: gone, wind

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
VÁClava-Czech
Firenze-Various
Raz-Hebrew
Blair['blɛə]
Thelonius-Various
AubrieAWB-reeEnglish (Modern)