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  1. Jun 15, 2016 · Without further context, as an idiom, "come at me" can be used to instigate, provoke, or invite another person to attack or fight. Nowadays, you might hear . Come at me bro! This dude wants to fight. Without further context, "come to me" sounds like you are signaling someone to come or move towards you.

  2. Sep 15, 2015 · "I will come on time." - this is idiomatic. "I will come at the time indicated." (which is 10:00 sharp) - this is very specific time-wise, you'll arrive on the dot - 10 o'clock sharp. "I will come in time." (there's a time limit and you'll arrive within that acceptable time limit) - earlier than 10:00 or 10:00 sharp.

  3. Jun 4, 2016 · I know that "will come" is simple future and "will be coming" is future continuous. Native speakers might actually prefer I'm coming tomorrow. Both statements with the progressive simply refer to the activity as having duration. But we'll also say I'll come tomorrow and I come tomorrow. These are all valid expressions.

  4. 7. It's because picnics and barbecues are plural. Consider: Picnics come in the summer, the sun comes at dawn. When the noun is singular, we conjugate with comes; when the noun is plural, we conjugate with come. Every Wednesday, five of my friends come over – Jane comes with Harry, but David and Betsy come with Linda. Share. Improve this answer.

  5. Nov 24, 2010 · 5. There are answers here that are close, but claim that "how come" is a contraction. Come has a sense, meaning "turn out", "happen", "come about". It's a relatively rare use now, but it was once more common: Til it com on a fest dai, þat king herod did for to call þe barnage — Cursor Mundi c 1400.

  6. Apr 27, 2020 · In parallel, "I come from" is more referring to a present situation ex: "I come from France". These two expressions in a same sentence you'd be something like "Hi! My name is Chloé, I am from England but now I'm visiting Europe. I've visited Portugal and Spain, and now I am landing in Belgium. I come from France, I took the airplane in Paris."

  7. The final piece of the puzzle of “how come” is the fact that it is actually an abbreviation of a longer phrase, which, although not known with certainty, was probably “how comes it” or “how does it come,” meaning “how did this (event, condition, etc.) happen to be this way.”.

  8. Please come by my place tomorrow. This means "When you're on your way to wherever you need to be, by train, by car, or on foot, make a stop at my door, there's a good boy. Don't forget to ring the bell. I'll be home." Please come up to my place tonight.

  9. Jul 22, 2014 · How come is it doesn't make sense. How comes it is an example of an older syntax of English, which you can find readily in sources such as Shakespeare and the King James Bible. In modern speech this has been entirely replaced by How does it come, but we still use the older syntax with auxiliaries: how is it, how can you etc.

  10. Feb 1, 2018 · "Come on in" has the same meaning as "come in" but is a more folksy way of extending the invitation. It suggests a kind of rural, down-home hospitality that is redolent of (American) TV shows of the '50s, which were ever a myth (although a persistent one) about how friendly people in the hinterland were.