come

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To move nearer to the point of perspective.
  2. To move toward the speaker.
  3. To move toward the listener.
  4. To move toward the object that is the focus of the sentence.
  5. To move toward the agent or subject of the main clause.
  6. To move toward an unstated agent.
  7. To arrive.
  8. To appear; to manifest itself; to cause a reaction by manifesting.
  9. To begin (to have an opinion or feeling).
  10. To do something by chance or unintentionally.
  11. To take a position relative to something else in a sequence.
  12. To achieve orgasm; to cum; to ejaculate.
noun
  1. Coming, arrival; approach.
  2. Semen
  3. Female ejaculatory discharge.
prep
  1. Used to indicate a point in time at or after which a stated event or situation occurs.
intj
  1. An exclamation to express annoyance.
  2. An exclamation to express encouragement, or to precede a request.
noun
  1. Alternative form of comma in its medieval use as a middot ⟨·⟩ serving as a form of colon.

Pronunciation

/kʌm/ [kʰɐm] kŭm En-uk-to come.ogg [kʰʌm] en-us-come.ogg [kəm] [km̩] /kʊm/

Word forms

come comes coming came comen no-table-tags glossary comed comest camest camedst comedst cometh coom

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *gʷem- Proto-Indo-European *gʷémt Proto-Germanic *kwemaną Proto-West Germanic *kweman Old English cuman Middle English comen English come From Middle English comen, cumen, from Old English cuman, from Proto-West Germanic *kweman, from Proto-Germanic *kwemaną (“to come”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷémt (“to step; to arrive”), from *gʷem- (“to come, step”). Cognates Cognate from Proto-Germanic with Scots cum (“to come”), Yola come, coome, cum (“to come”), North Frisian kaame, kame, keem, kem, kum, kååme, käme (“to come”), Saterland Frisian kume, kuume (“to come”), West Frisian komme (“to come”), Alemannic German cha, cheemen, cheme, cho, chomu, chéeme (“to come”), Bavarian ckeman, kemma, kemman, khemen, kumma, kumman, kèmmin (“to come”), Central Franconian komme, kunn, kumme (“to come”), Cimbrian ken, khemmen, khèmman (“to come”), Dutch komen, kommen (“to come”), Dutch Low Saxon kåmen (“to come”), German and Luxembourgish kommen (“to come”), Low German kamen, kuemen (“to come”), Mòcheno kemmen (“to come”), Yiddish קימען (kimen), קומען (kumen, “to come”), Danish and Norwegian Bokmål komme (“to come”), Elfdalian kumå (“to come”), Faroese and Icelandic koma (“to come; to arrive”), Jamtish kuma (“to come”), Norwegian Nynorsk koma, komma, komme, kåmmå, kåmå (“to come”), Swedish komma (“to come”), Crimean Gothic kommen (“to come”), Gothic 𐌵𐌹𐌼𐌰𐌽 (qiman, “to come”). Cognate from Proto-Indo-European with Latin venio (“to come; to approach”), Greek βήμα (víma, “pace, step”), Albanian ngah, ngaj (“to hasten, run”), Latvian dzimt (“to be born”), Lithuanian gimti (“to be born”), Armenian եկ (ek, “the act of coming, arrival; income”), Avestan 𐬔𐬀𐬨 (gam, “to come, go”), Northern Kurdish gav (“step”), Persian گام (gâm, “step”), Tocharian A kum- (“to come”), Tocharian B käm- (“to come”), Sanskrit गम् (gam, “to come, go, move”).

Translations

Abkhaz: аара Afrikaans: kom Akan: bra Akkadian: alākum Albanian: vij Southern Altai: келер Arabic: جَاءَ Arabic: أَتَى Arabic: جا Arabic: جه Arabic: إجا Arabic: أجا Arabic: قَدِمَ Arabic: وَصَلَ Arabic: وصل Tunisian Arabic: جاء Tunisian Arabic: وصل Armenian: գալ Aromanian: vin Aromanian: yin Assamese: আহ Early Assamese: আস্ Early Assamese: আ Asturian: venir Avestan: 𐬘𐬀𐬨𐬀𐬌𐬙𐬌 Azerbaijani: gəlmək Bakhtiari: اودن Balinese: teka Bangi: ya Basque: etorri Belarusian: прыбыва́ць Belarusian: прыбы́ць Belarusian: прыхо́дзіць Belarusian: прыйсці́ Belarusian: прыязджа́ць Belarusian: прые́хаць Bengali: আসা Bhojpuri: आइल Boloki: ya Borôro: aregodu Brahui: barr Bulgarian: и́двам Bulgarian: до́йда Bulgarian: дости́гам Bulgarian: дости́гна Bulgarian: присти́гам Bulgarian: присти́гна Bulgarian: явя́вам се Bulgarian: явя́ се Burmese: လာ Catalan: venir Chagatai: کلادو Chechen: лела Chinese Cantonese: 嚟 Chinese Cantonese: 到 Chinese: лэ Eastern Min Chinese: 來 /来 Chinese Mandarin: 來 /来 Chinese Mandarin: 到 Wu Chinese: 來 /来 East Circassian: къэкӏуэн West Circassian: къэкӏон Maore Comorian: uja Crimean Tatar: kelmek Czech: přicházet Czech: přijít Czech: přijíždět Czech: přijet
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