12 Phrasal Verbs with COME
Hello English learners. Welcome to a new lesson. As you probably know, phrasal verbs are essential to spoken English. There is no better way to say that you get up 7. It sounds silly to say that you rise at 7. So, in that sense, let’s look at 12 must-know phrasal verbs with “come” you should know.
Here is the list:
- Come across
- Come along
- Come around
- Come back
- Come by
- Come down with
- Come from
- Come into
- Come off
- Come out
- Come over
- Come through
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Come across
Meaning: to find something or meet someone by accident.
Mark came across his old skateboard while he was tidying the garage.
We came across some old friends while we were walking in the park.
Come along
Meaning: to attend or appear.
Some tourists came along with a tourist guide.
The bus came along right on time.
Phrasal verbs with COME
Come around
Meaning: to become conscious again.
Nora was so upset that she fainted but came around after a while.
Come back
Meaning: to return.
When Paul came back home, the guests had gone.
The band came back onto the stage for an encore.
Come by
Meaning: to get or receive.
The scientists came by the information from different sources.
I came by this book on the train.
Come down with
Meaning: to begin being ill.
Peter came down with a very bad cold while he was working in the garden.
Laura is not coming to work today because she came down with pneumonia.
Come from
Meaning: to originate.
George comes from a small town in Wales.
They come from a wealthy family.
Come into
Meaning: to acquire.
Sally came into her inheritance when she was thirty.
I came into possession of my grandfather’s old coins when he passed away.
Come off
Meaning: to make a certain impression.
Monica comes off as an arrogant person but she is really kind and polite.
It also means to fall from something.
Look! The handle came off the pot.
Come out
Meaning: to appear, to be published.
The cloud came out in the clear sky.
The second edition of the grammar book is coming out next month.
It also means to declare yourself openly as a gay.
Daniel came out as a gay to his parents.
Come over
Meaning: to affect.
A shiver came over her body when she heard the bad news.
Forgive me if I was rude, I don’t know what came over me.
Come through
Meaning: to get better after an illness.
She is coming through after the heart operation.
Quiz
Click here to learn phrasal verbs with ALONG

Phrasal verbs with COME
Click here to learn phrasal verbs with ALONG
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1 Comment
12 Idioms and Expressions Using COME - My Lingua Academy · 13 Aug 2024 at 5:28 pm
[…] Click here to learn 12 must-know phrasal verbs using the verb “come” […]