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61 come back
vi1) ( return) zurückkommen;\come back back and visit us, won't you? kommen Sie doch mal wieder bei uns vorbei!;the rain is coming back again es regnet schon wieder;and now to \come back back to your question... um auf Ihre Frage zurückzukommen...;to \come back back to a question/ topic auf eine Frage/ein Thema zurückkommen;to \come back back from war aus dem Krieg zurückkehren;to \come back back to sb zu jdm zurückkehrenflared trousers have \come back back Schlaghosen sind wieder into \come back back at sb with sth jdm etw entgegnen;to \come back back at sb with a vengeance es jdm [so richtig] heimzahlen -
62 come on
vi2) ( expression of annoyance)\come on on! jetzt hör aber auf!3) ( improve) vorankommen, Fortschritte machen;how's your English coming on? wie geht's mit deinem Englisch voran?;how's your broken leg? - oh, it's coming on was macht dein gebrochenes Bein? - ah, schon wieder besserto \come on on to sb jdn anbaggern ( fam)to \come on on strong ganz schön rangehen ( fam)what time does the news \come on on? wann kommen die Nachrichten?;the rain came on es begann zu regnen;I've a cold coming on ich kriege eine Erkältung;8) ( see accidentally)to \come on on sth [zufällig] auf etw akk stoßen9) ( age)he's coming on fifty er wird fünfzig -
63 come over
vi1) ( to a place) [her]überkommen;( to sb's home) vorbeischauen ( fam)\come over on over and have a drink with us komm doch rüber und trink was mit uns;her son is coming over from America this summer ihr Sohn kommt diesen Sommer aus Amerika herüber;we'll \come over over at six wir kommen um sechssth \come overs over sb etw überkommt jdn;I don't know what came over me ich weiß wirklich nicht, was in mich gefahren ist3) ( change point of view)to \come over over to sb's side auf jds Seite f überwechseln;4) ( create impression) wirken;to \come over over as arrogant/ as a bit of a bore arrogant/langweilig wirken;to \come over over as a genius ein Genie zu sein scheinen -
64 come on the scene
ظَهَرَ \ appear: to come into sight: A figure appeared in the distance, to present oneself; be seen publicly I have to appear in court today. arise (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.) A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. Most newspapers come out every day. Your photograph came out well. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. seem: to appear to be: He seems (to be) honest. It seems (clear) to me that I ought to go. show: to be seen: Dirt shows more on white clothes than on dark ones. turn up: (of sth. that was missing) to appear: The stolen goods turned up in the market. \ See Also بان (بَانَ)، لاح (لاَحَ)، برز (بَرَزَ)، طلع (طَلَعَ) -
65 come out
ظَهَرَ \ appear: to come into sight: A figure appeared in the distance, to present oneself; be seen publicly I have to appear in court today. arise (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.) A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. Most newspapers come out every day. Your photograph came out well. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. seem: to appear to be: He seems (to be) honest. It seems (clear) to me that I ought to go. show: to be seen: Dirt shows more on white clothes than on dark ones. turn up: (of sth. that was missing) to appear: The stolen goods turned up in the market. \ See Also بان (بَانَ)، لاح (لاَحَ)، برز (بَرَزَ)، طلع (طَلَعَ) -
66 come upon
transitive verb(meet by chance) begegnen (+ Dat.)* * *(to meet, find or discover by chance: She came upon a solution to the problem.) stoßen auf* * *vi1. (by chance)▪ to \come upon upon sb [zufällig] jdm begegnen2. (attack)* * *come upon v/i2. über jemanden herfallen4. jemandem zur Last fallen* * *transitive verb(meet by chance) begegnen (+ Dat.) -
67 come up to
vi1) ( reach)to \come up to up to sth bis zu etw dat reichen;he doesn't even \come up to [up] to my chest! er geht mir nicht einmal bis zur Brust!2) ( meet)to \come up to up to sb's standards jds Anforderungen pl genügen;to \come up to up to sb's expectations jds Erwartungen pl entsprechen3) ( approach)to \come up to up to sb auf jdn zukommen;my dad is coming up to retirement mein Vater steuert auf die Rente zu;it's coming up to five o'clock es geht auf fünf Uhr zu -
68 come near
transitive verb* * *come near v/i1. fig nahekommen (dat)2. come near doing sth etwas beinahe tun* * *transitive verbcome near [to] doing something — drauf und dran sein, etwas zu tun (ugs.)
* * *expr.herangekommen v. -
69 come through
vido you think we'll \come through through all right? denkst du, dass wir das unbeschadet überstehen werden?;to \come through through sth etw überlebenmy visa/divorce still hasn't \come through through mein Visum/meine Scheidung ist noch nicht durch ( fam)you mustn't let your nervousness \come through through in public du darfst der Öffentlichkeit nicht zeigen, dass du nervös bist -
70 come up
vido you \come up up to Edinburgh often? kommen Sie oft nach Edinburgh?2) ( study)my sister came up to Cambridge last year meine Schwester studiert seit letztem Jahr in Cambridge5) ( happen) passieren;please let me know if something \come ups up gib mir bitte Bescheid, wenn irgendwas passiert6) ( present itself)to \come up up for sale zum Verkauf stehen8) ( on television)coming up next on BBC 2... und auf BBC 2 sehen Sie als Nächstes...9) ( of plants) herauskommenPHRASES:to have \come up up in the world vornehm geworden sein;( achieved sth) es zu was gebracht haben -
71 come at
vi1) ( attack)to \come at at sb auf jdn losgehen;the ball came right at me der Ball kam genau auf mich zu2) ( discover)to \come at at sth etw herausfinden3) ( tackle)to \come at at a problem ein Problem angehen -
72 come forward
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73 come upon
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74 come up against
vito \come up against up against sb ( in sports) auf jdn treffen;( sb opposing your ideas) an jdn geraten -
75 come to
بَلَغَ \ add up: to reach a full amount, by adding all the figures: This bill adds up to $17. You added it up wrong. amount: to add up: These bills amount to over $10. arrive: to reach a place: They arrived home (or in London or at the cinema). attain: to reach; succeed in getting: He attained his goal of becoming rich. come to: amount to; reach when added up: My bill came to $75. reach: to stretch one’s hand out far enough to (take or) touch (sth.): Can you reach (that red book on) the top shelf?, to arrive at; come to: When did you reach London? Your letter never reached me. touch: to reach: Our speed just touched 90 miles an hour. \ See Also وصل (وَصَلَ) -
76 come (came)
صَادَفَ \ chance: to happen by chance: I chanced to meet him in the street. come (came): to happen: How did you come to hear about it?. happen: to be or do sth. by chance: The day you came happened to be my birthday. I happened to see it in the newspaper. -
77 come down
سَقَطَ \ collapse: to fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man. come down: to fall: The price of sugar came down. The telephone wires came down in the storm. come off: to fall off: The handle came off (the door). drop: to fall: An apple dropped from the tree. fail: (to cause) not to pass (an exam): He failed (in) his French examination. fall (fallen): to go down by mistake; drop: I slipped and fell (or fell down or fell over). He fell out of the tree and landed on his head. topple: to fall slowly (usu. of sth. that is top-heavy). tumble: to fall, often with a turning movement: He slipped, and tumbled down the stairs. \ See Also انهار (اِنْهَارَ)، هبط (هَبَطَ)، وقع (وَقَعَ)، رَسَبَ (في الامتحان)، انقلب (اِنْقَلَبَ) -
78 come off
سَقَطَ \ collapse: to fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man. come down: to fall: The price of sugar came down. The telephone wires came down in the storm. come off: to fall off: The handle came off (the door). drop: to fall: An apple dropped from the tree. fail: (to cause) not to pass (an exam): He failed (in) his French examination. fall (fallen): to go down by mistake; drop: I slipped and fell (or fell down or fell over). He fell out of the tree and landed on his head. topple: to fall slowly (usu. of sth. that is top-heavy). tumble: to fall, often with a turning movement: He slipped, and tumbled down the stairs. \ See Also انهار (اِنْهَارَ)، هبط (هَبَطَ)، وقع (وَقَعَ)، رَسَبَ (في الامتحان)، انقلب (اِنْقَلَبَ) -
79 come near to
vito \come near to near to doing sth drauf und dran sein, etw zu tun -
80 come across
عَثَرَ على \ come across: to find or meet by chance: I came across this old book in the market. discover: to find, esp. by chance: I discovered a snake under my bed. I never discovered who she was. find (found): to discover by chance: Did you find that old shoe in the road?. hit on, or upon: to find by chance: I hit upon a new way of saving money. lay hands on: to be able to find: I have a key, but I can’t lay hands on it just now. locate: to find sth. in a certain place (esp. on a map): The church is easily located by its high tower. strike: to find (by search or thought): We struck oil in the desert. I struck upon a new way of making soap.
См. также в других словарях:
come to sth — UK US come to sth Phrasal Verb with come({{}}/kʌm/ verb ► to be a particular amount or number after a mathematical calculation: »The total cost came to $20,000. ► to reach a particular condition or stage: come to a halt/end »In the past few… … Financial and business terms
come off sth — UK US come off sth Phrasal Verb with come({{}}/kʌm/ verb ► FINANCE to begin to become less in price or value after having increased: »Operating profits came off 10% to £20.6m. ► US to have recently finished a period of time when something very… … Financial and business terms
come under sth — UK US come under sth Phrasal Verb with come({{}}/kʌm/ verb ► to experience a bad situation: come under attack/criticism/pressure/threat »The decision to terminate the tax cuts in 2010 as a money saving measure quickly came under attack from… … Financial and business terms
ˌcome ˈoff (sth) — phrasal verb 1) be removed from something I pulled at the drawer, and the handle came off.[/ex] The grease won t come off your skin with ordinary washing.[/ex] 2) come off it spoken used for telling someone to stop saying something because you do … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˌcome ˈby (sth) — phrasal verb to go to the place where someone is for a short visit I ll come by this afternoon and we can talk about what happened.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˈcome by sth — phrasal verb to get something, especially something that is hard to get At that time, teaching jobs were hard to come by.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˌcome ˈthrough sth — phrasal verb to be still alive, working, or making progress after a difficult or dangerous experience It s been a very upsetting time but we ve come through it together.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˌcome ˈunder sth — phrasal verb to be forced to experience something unpleasant President Bush has come under pressure to step up the sanctions.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˈcome at sth — phrasal verb to examine or deal with something such as a problem in a particular way Try coming at it from a different angle.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˈcome from sth — phrasal verb 1) to have been born or lived in a particular place My parents came from Italy.[/ex] 2) to be produced by a particular place or thing, or to start from there The word comes from an African language.[/ex] I can t tell where the noise… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
ˌcome ˈinto sth — phrasal verb to be an aspect of a situation The argument was over artistic freedom – money never came into it.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English