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1 definition found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Come
v. i.
[
imp.
Came
p. p.
Come
p.
pr
&
vb
. n.
Coming
.]
1.
To
move
hitherward
;
to
draw
near
;
to
approach
the
speaker
,
or
some
place
or
person
indicated
; --
opposed
to
go
.
Look
,
who
comes
yonder?
--
Shak
.
I
did
not
come
to
curse
thee
.
--
Tennyson
.
2.
To
complete
a
movement
toward
a
place
;
to
arrive
.
When
we
came
to
Rome
.
--
Acts
xxviii
. 16.
Lately
come
from
Italy
.
--
Acts
xviii
. 2.
3.
To
approach
or
arrive
,
as
if
by
a
journey
or
from
a
distance
.
“Thy
kingdom
come
.”
The
hour
is
coming
,
and
now
is
.
--
John
.
v
. 25.
So
quick
bright
things
come
to
confusion
.
--
Shak
.
4.
To
approach
or
arrive
,
as
the
result
of
a
cause
,
or
of
the
act
of
another
.
From
whence
come
wars?
--
James
iv
. 1.
Both
riches
and
honor
come
of
thee
!
--
1
Chron
.
xxix
. 12.
5.
To
arrive
in
sight
;
to
be
manifest
;
to
appear
.
Then
butter
does
refuse
to
come
.
--
Hudibras
.
6.
To
get
to
be
,
as
the
result
of
change
or
progress
; --
with
a
predicate
;
as
,
to
come
untied
.
How
come
you
thus
estranged?
--
Shak
.
How
come
her
eyes
so
bright?
--
Shak
.
Note:
☞
Am
come
,
is
come
,
etc
.,
are
frequently
used
instead
of
have
come
,
has
come
,
etc
.,
esp
.
in
poetry
.
The
verb
to
be
gives
a
clearer
adjectival
significance
to
the
participle
as
expressing
a
state
or
condition
of
the
subject
,
while
the
auxiliary
have
expresses
simply
the
completion
of
the
action
signified
by
the
verb
.
Think
not
that
I
am come
to
destroy
.
--
Matt
.
v
. 17.
We
are come
off
like
Romans
.
--
Shak
.
The
melancholy
days
are come
,
the
saddest
of
the
year
.
--
Bryant
.
Note:
Come
may
properly
be
used
(
instead
of
go
)
in
speaking
of
a
movement
hence
,
or
away
,
when
there
is
reference
to
an
approach
to
the
person
addressed
;
as
,
I
shall
come
home
next
week
;
he
will
come
to
your
house
to-day
.
It
is
used
with
other
verbs
almost
as
an
auxiliary
,
indicative
of
approach
to
the
action
or
state
expressed
by
the
verb
;
as
,
how
came
you
to
do
it
?
Come
is
used
colloquially
,
with
reference
to
a
definite
future
time
approaching
,
without
an
auxiliary
;
as
,
it
will
be
two
years
,
come
next
Christmas
;
i
.
e
.
,
when
Christmas
shall
come
.
They
were
cried
In
meeting
,
come
next
Sunday
. --
Lowell
.
Come
,
in
the
imperative
,
is
used
to
excite
attention
,
or
to
invite
to
motion
or
joint
action
;
come
,
let
us
go
.
“This
is
the
heir
;
come
,
let
us
kill
him.”
--
Matt
.
xxi
. 38.
When
repeated
,
it
sometimes
expresses
haste
,
or
impatience
,
and
sometimes
rebuke
.
“
Come
,
come
,
no
time
for
lamentation
now.”
To come
,
yet
to
arrive
,
future
.
“In
times
to
come
.”
--
Dryden
.
“There's
pippins
and
cheese
to
come
.”
--
Shak
.
To come about
.
(a)
To
come
to
pass
;
to
arrive
;
to
happen
;
to
result
;
as
,
how
did
these
things
come
about
?
(b)
To
change
;
to
come
round
;
as
,
the
ship
comes
about
.
“The
wind
is
come
about
.”
--
Shak
.
On
better
thoughts
,
and
my
urged
reasons
,
They
are
come about
,
and
won
to
the
true
side
. --
B
.
Jonson
.
--
To come abroad
.
(a)
To
move
or
be
away
from
one's
home
or
country
.
“Am
come
abroad
to
see
the
world.”
--
Shak
.
(b)
To
become
public
or
known
. [
Obs
.]
“Neither
was
anything
kept
secret
,
but
that
it
should
come
abroad
.”
--
Mark
.
iv
. 22.
To come across
,
to
meet
;
to
find
,
esp
.
by
chance
or
suddenly
.
“We
come
across
more
than
one
incidental
mention
of
those
wars.”
--
E
.
A
.
Freeman
.
“Wagner's
was
certainly
one
of
the
strongest
and
most
independent
natures
I
ever
came
across
.”
--
H
.
R
.
Haweis
.
To come after
.
(a)
To
follow
.
(b)
To
come
to
take
or
to
obtain
;
as
,
to
come after
a
book
.
To come again
,
to
return
.
“His
spirit
came
again
and
he
revived.”
--
Judges
.
xv
. 19.
- -
To come and go
.
(a)
To
appear
and
disappear
;
to
change
;
to
alternate
.
“The
color
of
the
king
doth
come
and
go
.”
--
Shak
.
(b)
Mech.
To
play
backward
and
forward
.
To come at
.
(a)
To
reach
;
to
arrive
within
reach
of
;
to
gain
;
as
,
to
come at
a
true
knowledge
of
ourselves
.
(b)
To
come
toward
;
to
attack
;
as
,
he
came at
me
with
fury
.
To come away
,
to
part
or
depart
.
To come between
,
to
intervene
;
to
separate
;
hence
,
to
cause
estrangement
.
To come by
.
(a)
To
obtain
,
gain
,
acquire
.
“Examine
how
you
came
by
all
your
state.”
--
Dryden
.
(b)
To
pass
near
or
by
way
of
.
To come down
.
(a)
To
descend
.
(b)
To
be
humbled
.
To come down upon
,
to
call
to
account
,
to
reprimand
. [
Colloq
.] --
Dickens
.
To come home
.
(a)
To
return
to
one's
house
or
family
.
(b)
To
come
close
;
to
press
closely
;
to
touch
the
feelings
,
interest
,
or
reason
.
(c)
Naut.
To
be
loosened
from
the
ground
; --
said
of
an
anchor
.
To come in
.
(a)
To
enter
,
as
a
town
,
house
,
etc
.
“The
thief
cometh
in
.”
--
Hos
.
vii
. 1.
(b)
To
arrive
;
as
,
when
my
ship
comes in
.
(c)
To
assume
official
station
or
duties
;
as
,
when
Lincoln
came in
.
(d)
To
comply
;
to
yield
;
to
surrender
.
“We
need
not
fear
his
coming
in
”
--
Massinger
.
(e)
To
be
brought
into
use
.
“Silken
garments
did
not
come
in
till
late.”
--
Arbuthnot
.
(f)
To
be
added
or
inserted
;
to
be
or
become
a
part
of
.
(g)
To
accrue
as
gain
from
any
business
or
investment
.
(h)
To
mature
and
yield
a
harvest
;
as
,
the
crops
come in
well
.
(i)
To
have
sexual
intercourse
; --
with
to
or
unto
. --
Gen
.
xxxviii
. 16.
(j)
To
have
young
;
to
bring
forth
;
as
,
the
cow
will
come in
next
May
. [
U
.
S
.]
To come in for
,
to
claim
or
receive
.
“The
rest
came
in
for
subsidies.”
--
Swift
.
To come into
,
to
join
with
;
to
take
part
in
;
to
agree
to
;
to
comply
with
;
as
,
to
come into
a
party
or
scheme
.
To come it over
,
to
hoodwink
;
to
get
the
advantage
of
. [
Colloq
.]
To come near
or
To come nigh
,
to
approach
in
place
or
quality
;
to
be
equal
to
.
“Nothing
ancient
or
modern
seems
to
come
near
it.”
--
Sir
W
.
Temple
.
To come of
.
(a)
To
descend
or
spring
from
.
“
Of
Priam's
royal
race
my
mother
came
.”
--
Dryden
.
(b)
To
result
or
follow
from
.
“This
comes
of
judging
by
the
eye.”
--
L'Estrange
.
To come off
.
(a)
To
depart
or
pass
off
from
.
(b)
To
get
free
;
to
get
away
;
to
escape
.
(c)
To
be
carried
through
;
to
pass
off
;
as
,
it
came off
well
.
(d)
To
acquit
one's
self
;
to
issue
from
(
a
contest
,
etc
.);
as
,
he
came off
with
honor
;
hence
,
substantively
,
a
come-off
,
an
escape
;
an
excuse
;
an
evasion
. [
Colloq
.]
(e)
To
pay
over
;
to
give
. [
Obs
.]
(f)
To
take
place
;
to
happen
;
as
,
when
does
the
race
come off
?
(g)
To
be
or
become
after
some
delay
;
as
,
the
weather
came off
very
fine
.
(h)
To
slip
off
or
be
taken
off
,
as
a
garment
;
to
separate
.
(i)
To
hurry
away
;
to
get
through
. --
Chaucer
.
To come off by
,
to
suffer
. [
Obs
.]
“
To
come
off
by
the
worst.”
--
Calamy
.
To come off from
,
to
leave
.
“
To
come
off
from
these
grave
disquisitions.”
--
Felton
.
To come on
.
(a)
To
advance
;
to
make
progress
;
to
thrive
.
(b)
To
move
forward
;
to
approach
;
to
supervene
.
To come out
.
(a)
To
pass
out
or
depart
,
as
from
a
country
,
room
,
company
,
etc
.
“They
shall
come
out
with
great
substance.”
--
Gen
.
xv
. 14.
(b)
To
become
public
;
to
appear
;
to
be
published
.
“It
is
indeed
come
out
at
last.”
--
Bp
.
Stillingfleet
.
(c)
To
end
;
to
result
;
to
turn
out
;
as
,
how
will
this
affair
come out
?
he
has
come out
well
at
last
.
(d)
To
be
introduced
into
society
;
as
,
she
came out
two
seasons
ago
.
(e)
To
appear
;
to
show
itself
;
as
,
the
sun
came out
.
(f)
To
take
sides
;
to
announce
a
position
publicly
;
as
,
he
came out
against
the
tariff
.
(g)
To
publicly
admit
oneself
to
be
homosexual
.
To come out with
,
to
give
publicity
to
;
to
disclose
.
To come over
.
(a)
To
pass
from
one
side
or
place
to
another
.
“Perpetually
teasing
their
friends
to
come
over
to
them.”
--
Addison
.
(b)
To
rise
and
pass
over
,
in
distillation
.
To come over to
,
to
join
.
To come round
.
(a)
To
recur
in
regular
course
.
(b)
To
recover
. [
Colloq
.]
(c)
To
change
,
as
the
wind
.
(d)
To
relent
. --
J
.
H
.
Newman
.
(e)
To
circumvent
;
to
wheedle
. [
Colloq
.]
To come short
,
to
be
deficient
;
to
fail
of
attaining
.
“All
have
sinned
and
come
short
of
the
glory
of
God.”
--
Rom
.
iii
. 23.
To come to
.
(a)
To
consent
or
yield
. --
Swift
.
(b)
Naut.
(
with
the
accent
on
to
)
To
luff
;
to
bring
the
ship's
head
nearer
the
wind
;
to
anchor
.
(c)
(
with
the
accent
on
to
)
To
recover
,
as
from
a
swoon
.
(d)
To
arrive
at
;
to
reach
.
(e)
To
amount
to
;
as
,
the
taxes
come to
a
large
sum
.
(f)
To
fall
to
;
to
be
received
by
,
as
an
inheritance
. --
Shak
.
To come to blows
.
See
under
Blow
.
To come to grief
.
See
under
Grief
.
To come to a head
.
(a)
To
suppurate
,
as
a
boil
.
(b)
To
mature
;
to
culminate
;
as
a
plot
.
To come to one's self
,
to
recover
one's
senses
.
To come to pass
,
to
happen
;
to
fall
out
.
To come to the scratch
.
(a)
Prize Fighting
To
step
up
to
the
scratch
or
mark
made
in
the
ring
to
be
toed
by
the
combatants
in
beginning
a
contest
;
hence
:
(b)
To
meet
an
antagonist
or
a
difficulty
bravely
. [
Colloq
.]
To come to time
.
(a)
Prize Fighting
To
come
forward
in
order
to
resume
the
contest
when
the
interval
allowed
for
rest
is
over
and
“time”
is
called
;
hence
:
(b)
To
keep
an
appointment
;
to
meet
expectations
. [
Colloq
.]
To come together
.
(a)
To
meet
for
business
,
worship
,
etc
.;
to
assemble
. --
Acts
i
. 6.
(b)
To
live
together
as
man
and
wife
. --
Matt
.
i
. 18.
To come true
,
to
happen
as
predicted
or
expected
.
To come under
,
to
belong
to
,
as
an
individual
to
a
class
.
To come up
(a)
to
ascend
;
to
rise
.
(b)
To
be
brought
up
;
to
arise
,
as
a
question
.
(c)
To
spring
;
to
shoot
or
rise
above
the
earth
,
as
a
plant
.
(d)
To
come
into
use
,
as
a
fashion
.
To come up the capstan
Naut.
,
to
turn
it
the
contrary
way
,
so
as
to
slacken
the
rope
about
it
.
To come up the tackle fall
Naut.
,
to
slacken
the
tackle
gently
. --
Totten
.
To come up to
,
to
rise
to
;
to
equal
.
To come up with
,
to
overtake
or
reach
by
pursuit
.
To come upon
.
(a)
To
befall
.
(b)
To
attack
or
invade
.
(c)
To
have
a
claim
upon
;
to
become
dependent
upon
for
support
;
as
,
to come upon
the
town
.
(d)
To
light
or
chance
upon
;
to
find
;
as
,
to
come upon
hid
treasure
.
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