Definition of 'come'
Word forms: comes, coming, camelanguage note: The form come is used in the present tense and is the past participle.
1. intransitive verb
When a person or thing comes to a particular place, especially to a place where you are, they move there.
2. transitive verb
3. intransitive verb
4. intransitive verb
If something comes up to a particular point or down to it, it is tall enough, deep enough, or long enough to reach that point.
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word forms: comes, coming, camelanguage note: The form come is used in the present tense and is the past participle.
1. intransitive verb
2. transitive verb
3. transitive verb
4. intransitive verb
When a particular event or time comes, it arrives or happens.
coming singular noun
5. intransitive verb
6. intransitive verb
7. intransitive verb
8. intransitive verb
9. intransitive verb
10. intransitive verb
11. transitive verb
12. intransitive verb
If a type of thing comes in a particular range of colors, forms, styles, or sizes, it can have any of those colors, forms, styles, or sizes.
13. intransitive verb
14. link verb
15. preposition
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word forms: comes, coming, camelanguage note: The form come is used in the present tense and is the past participle.
2.
3.
See to come
4.
5. See also coming
Phrasal verbs:
language note: Come is used in a large number of expressions which are explained under other words
in this dictionary. For example, the expression 'to come to terms with something'
is explained at 'term.' See come about
See come across
See come along
See come around
See come at
See come back
See come between
See come by
See come down
See come down on
See come down to
See come down with
See come for
See come forward
See come in
See come in for
See come into
See come off
See come on
See come on to
See come out
See come over
See come round
See come through
See come to
See come under
See come up
See come up against
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Video: pronunciation of
come
Word Frequency
come in American English
verb intransitiveWord forms: came, come, ˈcoming
1.
to move from a place thought of as “there” to or into a place thought of as “here”:
a.
come to me, will you come to the dance tonight?
2.
to approach or reach by or as by moving toward
4.
to extend; reach
the bus line comes near the hotel
5.
to happen; take place
success came to him early in life
7.
to occur in a certain place or order
after 9 comes 10
8.
9.
a.
to be derived
milk comes from cows
b.
to be descended
he comes from an old family
c.
to be a native, resident, or former resident
with from10.
to be caused; result
illness may come from a poor diet
13.
to enter into a certain state or condition
this word has come into use
14.
to get to be; become
my shoe came loose
16.
to amount; add up (to)
17. Informal
to have a sexual orgasm
noun
interjection
Idioms:
Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
Word origin
ME comen < OE cuman, akin to Goth qiman, Ger kommen < IE base *gwem-, *gwā-, to go, come > L venire, to come, Gr bainein, to go
Word Frequency
come in British English
verbWord forms: comes, coming, came or come (mainly intr)
1.
to move towards a specified person or place
come to my desk
4.
to occur in the course of time
Christmas comes but once a year
5.
to exist or occur at a specific point in a series
your turn comes next
11.
to arrive at or be brought into a particular state or condition
you will soon come to grief
the new timetable comes into effect on Monday
13.
to become
your wishes will come true
14. (tr; takes an infinitive)
to be given awareness
I came to realize its enormous value
17. (transitive) British informal
to play the part of
don't come the fine gentleman with me
18. (transitive) British informal
to cause or produce
don't come that nonsense again
19. (subjunctive use)
when (a specified time or event has arrived or begun)
she'll be sixteen come Sunday
come the revolution, you'll be the first to go
20. See as…as they come
21. See come again?
22. See come and
23. See come clean
24. See come good
25. See come it
26. See come to light
27. See come to light with
28. See come to pass
29. See how come?
exclamation
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word origin
Old English cuman; related to Old Norse koma, Gothic qiman, Old High German queman to come, Sanskrit gámati he goes
Examples of 'come' in a sentence
come
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Trends of
come
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In other languages
come
British English: come
/kʌm/ VERB
When you come to a place, you move towards it or arrive there.
She came into the room.
- American English: come /ˈkʌm/
- Arabic: يَأْتِي
- Brazilian Portuguese: vir
- Chinese: 来
- Croatian: doći
- Czech: přijít
- Danish: komme
- Dutch: komen
- European Spanish: venir
- Finnish: tulla
- French: venir
- German: kommen
- Greek: έρχομαι
- Italian: venire
- Japanese: 来る
- Korean: 오다
- Norwegian: komme
- Polish: przyjść
- European Portuguese: vir
- Romanian: a veni
- Russian: приходить
- Spanish: venir
- Swedish: komma
- Thai: มา
- Turkish: gelmek
- Ukrainian: приходити
- Vietnamese: đến nơi
Browse alphabetically
come
Source
Definition of come from the Collins English Dictionary
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