388
they appear ( APB , M ) i±J M, Mitt: The
rain stopped and the sun came out. M 1^/5 APB di ATo 2 (of flowers jt A) to open iS jf; fftVc: The daffodils came
out early this year. /Mill & 4* A #.-¥-<> 3
to be
produced or published ftJjjx; %tfj; JtA: When is her new
novel coming out? jr 7 i$H«l Bt th -Jfe ? 4 (of news, the truth, etc. to become known ft
;
A A#fffl: The full story came out at the trial. ^ 'If M A£ o 0 [+ that] It came out that
he’d been telling lies, IgA aM'ftk—- jk^iftilo 5 if a
photograph comes out, it is a clear picture when it is developed and printed
( ) if M:
The photos from our trip didn’t come out. fliiVM'ilffiM
A fo 6 to be shown clearly MA ;
fiitS: Her best qualities come out in a crisis.
N"
& A 7 l±S A o 7 when
words come out, they are spoken i&lh; i# dj ; I tried to say ‘I love you, ’ but the words wouldn’t come
out. “7cJHft” , ffij&ifiS
A iMft
A tb P
o 8 to
say publicly whether you agree or disagree with sth A-JFAHJ ( 1^711 A A Nil ) : He came out against the
plan. {tk£Af^A&#;i£Ait$Jo 0 In her speech, the senator came out in
favour of a change in the law.
9 (BrE) to stop work and go on
strike |I
10 to no
longer hide the fact that you are homosexual
A # ft
SigejSN'l4®#W»£;
11 (of
a young upper-class girl,
especially in the past X5b IBBtAMUz^AA) to be
formally introduced into society )
|T|AI±^C# .come 'out (of sth)
1 (of
an object $) to be removed from a place where it is fixed ( M. @ A ^, A W : This nail won’t
come out. iAMfJTMAih Ao 2 (of dirt, a mark,
etc. ft , ft M #) to be removed from sth
by washing or cleaning if (^: These
ink stains won’t come out of
my dress. 3% AJB 0 Will the
colour come out (= become faint or disappear) if
I wash it? JtArk ?
,come 'out at sth [no
passive] to add up to a particular cost or sum &
ff;
: The total bill comes out at
£500. )A
500 ,come ‘out in sth [no passive] (of a person A)
to become covered in spots, etc. on the skin
( i£3£_h )
( $£,&# ) : Hot weather makes her come out in a rash. fe&o ,come ‘out of yourself
to relax and become more confident and
friendly with other people HJ&P
£ fsfHA££:
It was when she started drama classes that she really came out of
herself.
nmmo ,come ‘out of sth [no passive] to develop from sth hi -r4
( ) : The book came out of his
experiences in
Rock music came out of the blues.
.come
‘out with sth [no passive] to say sth, especially sth
surprising or rude $ tB ( A4t 4- A at ® ffl.# W if ) : He came out with a stream
of abuse. fiki#7“'iii ^ (tf) Jffi if o o She sometimes comes out with the most
extraordinary remarks. M#B$$feif Ai£1j?>P3j$o .come ‘over 1 (BrE, informal) to suddenly feel sth M3}-. [+ ADJ].1 suddenly came over all
shy.
2
= come across(2): He came over well in the
interview, fib# If-ft 4* ASTTfliif ,come
‘over (to .do) to come to a place,
especially sb’s house, to visit for a short time ( A jf $J A A A ) M W it if .come ‘over (to ..t )
(from ... ) to
travel from one place to another, usually over a long distance ( ii # gc gg Hfe
) M. ••• f!l , M. ••• A : Why don’t you
come over to England in the summer? #AMA&XAA^j£
.come ‘over (to sth) to change from one side,
opinion, etc. to another 1%) ( ) .come over sb
[no passive] to affect sb A: A fit of dizziness came
over her. M 31 — P£ A # <> 0 I can’t think what
came over me (=1 do not know what caused
me to behave in that way). ilcA^itftJLAv A To .come round | .come round (to sth) (BrE) = come
AROUND
.come ‘through (of news or a message JO to
arrive by telephone, radio, etc. or through an
official
organization ( fflfe.if , 774 aSih'B A (JIT) ) it A :
A message is just coming through. SftAo ,come
‘through
(sth) to
get better after a serious illness or to avoid serious injury ( 1g#r/f ) JUS);
Pi7?l survive:
With
such a weak heart she was lucky to come through the operation. M flAk §1 iB #1 , 7 A /s .come ‘through (with sth) to successfully do or
complete sth that you have promised to do ( We were worried
she wouldn’t be able to handle it, but she
came through in the end. MMJW
i&ilHSfcKJ To o The bank finally came
through with the money.
.come
to = come around(I)
.come
to your self
(old-fashioned) to return to your
normal state ‘come
to sb [no
passive] (of an idea ±3£c) to enter your mind
MSittS: The
idea came to me in the bath. frjTJltt} TSAAlfCo O [+ that] It suddenly came to her
that she had been wrong all along.
MisftftTo
'come
to sth [no
passive] 1 to add up to sth pK+;
Ait; >^A: The bill came to $30. ^ 7#.#ft>^it
A 30 jCo o I
never expected those few items to come to so much. A#^ ^ ^ o 2 to reach a
particular situation, especially a bad one iiHJ ( ) : The doctors
will operate if necessary—but it may not come
to that.
>j&
OWho’dhave
thought things would come to this (= become so bad)?
.come
to'gether if
two or more different people or things come together, they form a united group
it jjjt —ft; It:
Three
colleges have come together to
create a new university. H Jjff J —
o Bits and pieces of things he’d read and
heard were coming together, and he began to understand, ftk 3\
'come under sth [no passive] 1 to be included in a
particular group !H A; !H A: What heading does this come under? 0 ^ tt M ? 2 to be a person
that others are attacking or
criticizing j&A ( iftf&sSUIt W ) g : The head teacher came under a lot of
criticism from the parents. -£'§!!] TlCtclAiB^iitif 0
3
to be controlled or influenced by sth ft — ;
$£ ■
■ ■
j^P|p]: All her students came under
her spell.
.come
'up 1
(of plants W$j) to appear above the
soil A f±l i& ffi; ®£± rfff 4 : The daffodils are just beginning to come up. 3l^7KfllJ4£IWM®±$:3£0 2 (of the sun APB) to
rise tt'jS: We watched the sun come up. ACJ^lf T 0tho 3 to happen A A: I’m afraid something urgent has come up. i© '[B W ^ M V 'If A A T 0 0 We ’ll let you know if any
vacancies come up. I
4
to be mentioned or discussed The subject came up in conversation. if
7 31
7 jA T
if M o O The question is bound to
come up at the meeting. & ±&4"
IrI M
0 5 (of an event or a time ^'If b^B^iWI)
to be going to happen very soon
iUA ) : Her birthday is coming up
soon.
0
BPitAlISc 6 to be dealt with by a court ( hi ) Ail: Her divorce case comes up
next month. M flo 7 if your number, name, ticket, etc. comes up in
a betting game, it is chosen and you win sth ( ) m\
41,
A A 8 (informal) (usually used in the
progressive tenses M TJ&'frN') to arrive; to be ready soon
A Pj; ‘Is lunch ready?’‘Coming
up!’
■&i?Tfl%?- ” “5,±fc^!.
” .come
‘up (to ... ) (BrE,
formal) to arrive at a
university, especially
Plin come
down (from
...) .come
up (to . (from ... ) to come from one place
to another, especially from the south of a country to the north or from a
smaller place to a larger one ( M - - ) ±#J (
BjcA/hMAf'IAMA ) : Why don’t you come up to
AAft/lA?
.come
’up (to sb) to
move towards sb, in order to talk to them ( AUtH® ) i£f'JlM, Aifi: He came up to me and asked for a light. A fa