come from
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English comen from.
Verb
[edit]come from (third-person singular simple present comes from, present participle coming from, simple past came from, past participle come from)
- (transitive) To have as one's origin, birthplace or nationality.
- Most tourists in Mallorca come from England. My girlfriend comes from Sweden.
- 1822 June–July (date written), Percy Bysshe Shelley, “The Triumph of Life”, in Mary W[ollstonecraft] Shelley, editor, Posthumous Poems of Percy Bysshe Shelley, London: […] [C. H. Reynell] for John and Henry L[eigh] Hunt, […], published 1824, →OCLC, page 89:
- Thou comest from the realm without a name, […]
- 1883, Howard Pyle, “Robin Hood turns Butcher”, in The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood […], New York, N.Y.: […] Charles Scribner’s Sons […], →OCLC, part second, page 48:
- Not so much as one farthing would I take from thee, for I love a fair Saxon face like thine right well; more especially when it cometh from Locksley Town, and most especially when the man that owneth it is to marry a bonny lass on Thursday next.
- 1900 December – 1901 October, Rudyard Kipling, chapter IV, in Kim (Macmillan’s Colonial Library; no. 414), London: Macmillan and Co., published 1901, →OCLC, page 107:
- Hai, my son, thou hast never learned all that since thou camest from Belait (Europe). Who suckled thee?
- 1993 December 12, Jim Sheridan, Terry George, In the Name of the Father, spoken by Gerry Conlon (Daniel Day-Lewis), distributed by Universal Pictures:
- To explain how I happened to be in England in 1974 at the time of the bombing, I better take you back to Northern Ireland, where I come from.
- (transitive) To be derived from.
- 2013 July-August, Lee S. Langston, “The Adaptable Gas Turbine”, in American Scientist[1], volume 101, number 4, page 264:
- Turbines have been around for a long time—windmills and water wheels are early examples. The name comes from the Latin turbo, meaning vortex, and thus the defining property of a turbine is that a fluid or gas turns the blades of a rotor, which is attached to a shaft that can perform useful work.
- (transitive, slightly informal) To derive one's opinion or argument from; to take as a conceptual starting point.
Conjugation
[edit]Conjugation of come from
infinitive | (to) come from | ||
---|---|---|---|
present tense | past tense | ||
1st-person singular | come from | came from | |
2nd-person singular | come from, comest from† | came from, camest from† | |
3rd-person singular | comes from, cometh from† | came from | |
plural | come from | ||
subjunctive | come from | came from | |
imperative | come from | — | |
participles | coming from | came from |
Translations
[edit]have as one's birthplace or nationality
be derived from
derive one's opinions from
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Categories:
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English phrasal verbs
- English phrasal verbs formed with "from"
- English multiword terms
- English transitive verbs
- English terms with usage examples
- English terms with quotations
- English informal terms