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come verb (MOVE TO SPEAKER)
come verb (MOVE TO LISTENER)
come verb (ARRIVE)
- The doctor at the hospital says that she'll be able to come home within two weeks.
- After you've gained some experience teaching abroad you can come home and get a job.
- The school is required to notify parents if their children fail to come to school.
- The men came to remove the rubbish from the backyard.
- He thumped on the door but nobody came.
come verb (LEAVE)
- When he came out of the water, he was trembling with cold.
- The gunmen were lying in wait when Mr Predit came out of the hotel.
- We exchanged a few words as we were coming away from the meeting.
- Her face was a sickly colour when she came out of the dentist's.
- He came off the tennis court with a twisted ankle.
come verb (DIFFERENT STATE)
come verb (HAPPEN)
come verb (BE ORDERED)
come verb (EXIST)
- account for sth
- alive
- be
- be a thing idiom
- been
- estate
- existential
- extant
- found
- have legs idiom
- hood
- living
- reign
- run
- spring up
- stand
- they're
- thing
- viability
- were
You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics:
- be in the first flush of idiom
- be/get in on the ground floor idiom
- become
- begin
- branch out
- develop
- get down to business idiom
- grow
- here
- here goes! idiom
- hit the ground running idiom
- inaugurate
- inauguration
- motion
- strike
- strike out
- stuck
- stumble into sth
- swing into action idiom
- touch sth off
Grammar
Idioms
Phrasal verbs
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