come in
短语进来, 到达, 流行起来, 当选, 到手 [建] 利润
发音
词形变化
释义与例句
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1.
To enter.
Please come in and look around.
Come in, it's cold outside.
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2.
To arrive.
That flight just came in.
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3.
To become relevant, applicable, or useful.
The third stage of the plan is where Team B comes in.
1889, Thomas Huxley, in Popular Science Monthly; part of the "Agnosticism controversy", Agnosticism: A Rejoinder As I have shown, "infidel" merely means somebody who does not believe what you believe yourself, and therefore Dr. Wace has a perfect right to call, say, my old Egyptian donkey-driver, Nooleh, and myself, infidels, just as Nooleh and I have a right to call him an infidel. The ludicrous aspect of the thing comes in only when either of us demands that the two others should so label themselves.
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4.
To become available.
Blueberries will be coming in next month.
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5.
To have a strong enough signal to be able to be received well.
Most of the neighbors get 14 channels, but only two of them come in well here.
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6.
To join or enter; to begin playing with a group.
音乐They started together, but the drummer came in late.
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7.
To enter a plan or group; to join in.
非正式Near-synonym: come across
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8.
To surrender; to turn oneself in.
Near-synonym: come across
to come in from the cold
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9.
To yield or surrender.
不及物 -
10.
To fully develop.
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11.
To begin transmitting.
This is Charlie 456 to base. Come in, base. Do you read me?
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12.
To function in the indicated manner.
Four-wheel drive sure came in handy while the bridge was washed out.
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13.
To finish a race or similar competition in a particular position, such as first place, second place, or the like.
The horse I had bet on came in fourth in the second race.
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14.
To finish a race or similar competition in first place.
My horse came in in the first race.
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15.
To rise.
The tide will come in in an hour.
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16.
To become fashionable.
Orange blouses are coming in!
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17.
To report to a workplace for a shift.
不及物 -
18.
To be correctly placed in preparation for printing.
废旧 媒体 印刷
词汇关系
词源
From Middle English com in, imperative form of Middle English incomen (“to come in; enter”), from Old English incuman (“to come in; enter”), from Proto-Germanic *inkwemaną (“to come in; enter”), equivalent to come + in. Compare Dutch kom in (“come in”), singular imperative form of inkomen (“to come in; enter”), German einkommen (“to come in; enter”). See also income, incoming.
来源:wiktionary