Bing found these results
- adjectivecoming (adjective)nouncoming (noun) · comings (plural noun)verbcoming (present participle)
- move or travel toward or into a place thought of as near or familiar to the speaker:"Jessica came into the kitchen" · "I came here on holiday with my parents" · "she came downstairs" · "he came rushing out" · "damp is coming through the ceiling"Opposite:go away
- arrive at a specified place:"we walked along till we came to a stream" · "it was very late when she came back" · "the letter hasn't come yet"Similar:get here/therereach one's destinationmake itput in an appearancecome on the scenepresent oneselfOpposite:
- (of a thing) reach or extend to a specified point:"women wore slim dresses that came all the way to their shoes" · "the path comes straight down"Similar:arrive atget as far asmake it toset foot onhappen onchance onlight onstumble onblunder onfind by chanceend up atland up atfetch up atcome as far asnot stop untilOpposite:
- (be coming)approach:"someone was coming" · "she heard the train coming"Similar:in prospectabout to happenupon usin the windjust around the corner
- travel in order to be with a specified person, to do a specified thing, or to be present at an event:"the police came" · "come and live with me" · "the electrician came to fix the stove" · "we have certainly come a long way since Aristotle"
- join someone in participating in a specified activity or course of action:"do you want to come fishing tomorrow?"
- said to someone when correcting, reassuring, or urging them on:"“Come, come, child, no need to thank me.”"
- occur; happen; take place:"twilight had not yet come" · "his father waited for a phone call that never came" · "the attacks came without warning" · "the best is yet to come" · "the cuts come amid increasing competition in Hong Kong"
- be heard, perceived, or experienced:"a voice came from the kitchen" · "it came as a great shock" · "“No,” came the reply"
- take or occupy a specified position in space, order, or priority:"prisons come far down the list of priorities" · "I make sure my kids come first"
OriginOld English cuman, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch komen and German kommen. - People also ask
Coming Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
COMING | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
COMING Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
Interesting reads - Define coming
Powered by Microsoft StartComing - definition of coming by The Free Dictionary
COMING definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
Coming - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com
coming noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes ...
COMING Definition & Usage Examples | Dictionary.com
coming noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes ...
coming - WordReference.com Dictionary of English
- Some results have been removed