word choice - "She is gone" versus "she has gone"


When should I say "She is gone", and when should I say "She has gone" (and why)?


I think that when I mean "She went away and she's still there", it should be "She has gone". Are there exceptions where it should be "She is gone" ?



Answer



You should normally use be gone if no direction is specified, have gone with directions:



Where is Cleopatra? She is gone. (= she is away, or dead)


Where is Cleopatra? She has gone to the temple.



This is idiom: it is irregular and only applies to very few verbs. And is gone can still be used with specific directions sometimes, though it is probably rare. The opposite has gone without direction doesn't sound wrong, but it is probably less frequent.


I believe to be + past participle was used to form the present perfect for all intransitive verbs in older English, just as in other Germanic languages: not I have been but I am been, etc. So it was once he is gone always, even with specific directions, as in modern Dutch hij is naar huis gegaan. Then at a certain point in time the default auxiliary verb for the present perfect of intransitive verbs changed to have in English; but some old, very frequent expressions stayed in use, like to be gone and some others.


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