come+to+exist

  • 21come into play — phrasal : to have an effect : play a part his early training in self expression came into play in his new situation * * * come into play To bring, call or come into exercise, operation or use ● play * * * come into play phrase to start to happen… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 22come back from the dead — rise from/come back from/the dead phrase to become alive again after being dead Thesaurus: to start to exist or happensynonym Main entry: dead …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 23come into being — verb To form; to start to exist. Sociologists would like to study how this phenomenon came into being. Syn: appear, form, materialize, take shape …

    Wiktionary

  • 24come through — I (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To be successful] Syn. accomplish, score, triumph; see achieve 1 , succeed 1 . 2. [To survive] Syn. endure, live through, persist, withstand; see endure 2 . 3. [To do] Syn. accomplish, achieve, carry out; see perform 1 . II… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 25exist — v 1. be, have being; live, breathe, draw breath, respire; have life, have animation, have vitality, be viable; subsist, vegetate. 2. continue, remain, endure, abide, last, stay; survive, Sl. get along. 3. occur, happen, obtain, prevail; take… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 26come into being — to start to exist at the moment when the Earth came into being …

    English dictionary

  • 27ˈcome with sth — phrasal verb to exist or develop as a result of something He has the kind of skill that comes with years of practice.[/ex] …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 28exist — To be; to have being; to come into existence; to have existence …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 29A Change Is Gonna Come (song) — Infobox Song Name =A Change Is Gonna Come Border = Caption = Type =album track, B side to Shake Artist =Sam Cooke alt Artist = Album =Ain t That Good News Published =1963 (ABKCO) Released =December 22, 1964 (single) track no =7 Recorded =… …

    Wikipedia

  • 30O come, O come, Emmanuel — is a translation of the Latin text ( Veni, veni, Emmanuel ) by John Mason Neale and Henry Sloane Coffin[1][2] in the mid 19th century. It is a metrical version of a collation of various Advent Antiphons (the acrostic O Antiphons), which now… …

    Wikipedia