come down

See also: comedown and come-down

English

Pronunciation

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Verb

come down (third-person singular simple present comes down, present participle coming down, simple past came down, past participle come down)

  1. (intransitive) To descend, fall down, collapse.
    A tree came down and hit me on the head.
  2. (intransitive) To be demolished.
    The damage sustained in the fire is so great that the whole building will have to come down.
  3. (intransitive) To decrease.
    Real estate prices have come down since the peak of the boom.
  4. (intransitive) To reach a decision.
    I can't guess which way the board will come down on the project.
  5. (intransitive) To be passed through time.
    Much wisdom has come down in the form of proverbs.
  6. (intransitive, idiomatic) To return from an elevated state of consciousness or emotion.
    He finally came down from his post-bonus high.
    • 1995, Jarvis Cocker (lyrics), “Sorted For E’s and Wizz”, in Different Class, performed by Pulp:
      In the middle of the night, it feels alright / But then tomorrow morning / Ooh, ooh, then you come down
    • 2005 January 30, Drake Bennett, “Dr. Ecstasy”, in The New York Times, ISSN 0362-4331:
      In 1967, a Shulgin compound called DOM enjoyed a brief vogue in Haight-Ashbury under the name STP, at doses several times larger than those at which Shulgin had found significant psychoactive effects, and emergency rooms saw a spike in the number of people coming in thinking they would never come down.
    • 2015 June 28, “It was 20 years ago today: the year British dance music went wild”, in The Observer:
      Britpop had revitalised rock, and an unprecedented explosion in dance music – sparked off by a second consecutive sunny and idyllic Glastonbury – transformed how Britain thought, listened, partied and came down afterwards.
  7. (impersonal, UK) To rain.
    It's coming down heavily now.
  8. (intransitive, UK) To graduate from university, especially an Oxbridge university.
    • 2008, Preeta Samarasan, Evening is the Whole Day, Fourth Estate, page 24:
      Raju had got a job with a law firm in Singapore after coming down from Oxford.
  9. Shortening of of come down the (pike, line, etc.) To be about to happen.

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