had come

  • 1Come Tu Mi Vuoi — (You Need Love Single by Alexia from the album Gli Occhi Grandi Della Luna Released …

    Wikipedia

  • 2Come hither child — is a poem written by the English poet Emily Jane Brontë, one of the four Brontë siblings famous for literature in the first half of the 19th century. The poem was written on 19 July 1839. It is set in the imaginary realm of Gaaldine, referring to …

    Wikipedia

  • 3come as — phrase to wear unusual clothes that make you look like a particular kind of person for a fancy dress party He had come as Napoleon. Thesaurus: to put on or be wearing clothes and to dress other peoplesynonym to remove clothes and not wear… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 4come true — {v.} To really happen; change from a dream or a plan into a fact. * /It took years of planning and saving, but their seagoing vacation came true at last./ * /It was a dream come true when he met the President./ * /His hope of living to 100 did… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 5come true — {v.} To really happen; change from a dream or a plan into a fact. * /It took years of planning and saving, but their seagoing vacation came true at last./ * /It was a dream come true when he met the President./ * /His hope of living to 100 did… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 6come adrift — british phrase to become separated from something Somehow the picture hook had come adrift from the wall. Thesaurus: to be separated from somethingsynonym Main entry: adrift * * * come adrift chiefly Brit : to become loose or unattached …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 7come about — {v.} To take place; happen, occur. * /Sometimes it is hard to tell how a quarrel comes about./ * /When John woke up he was in the hospital, but he didn t know how that had come about./ …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 8come down in the world — {v. phr.} To lose a place of respect or honor, become lower (as in rank or fortune). * /The stranger plainly had come down a long way in the world./ Compare: DOWN ON ONE S LUCK …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 9come about — {v.} To take place; happen, occur. * /Sometimes it is hard to tell how a quarrel comes about./ * /When John woke up he was in the hospital, but he didn t know how that had come about./ …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 10come down in the world — {v. phr.} To lose a place of respect or honor, become lower (as in rank or fortune). * /The stranger plainly had come down a long way in the world./ Compare: DOWN ON ONE S LUCK …

    Dictionary of American idioms