come out
See also: comeout
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌkʌm ˈaʊt/
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
come out (third-person singular simple present comes out, present participle coming out, simple past came out, past participle come out)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see come, out.
- The mouse came out of the hole.
- To be discovered, be revealed.
- It finally came out that he had been lying all the time.
- To be published, be issued.
- My new book comes out next week.
- (old-fashioned or historical) (as a debutante) To make a formal debut in society.
- 1838 (date written), L[etitia] E[lizabeth] L[andon], chapter VI, in Lady Anne Granard; or, Keeping up Appearances. […], volume I, London: Henry Colburn, […], published 1842, OCLC 1000392275, page 63:
- "You would not trouble it much, child," returned Lady Anne, pettishly; "you know you are the plain one of the family. I do not know what I shall do with you when you come out; you will have no beauty but that of youth."
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- (copulative) To end up or result.
- There were a lot of problems at the start, but it all came out well in the end.
- (cricket, of a batsman) To walk onto the field at the beginning of an innings.
- (idiomatic, informal) To come out of the closet.
- He came out to his parents as gay last week.
- 2011, Allan Bérubé, My Desire for History: Essays in Gay, Community, and Labor History
- I had not come out yet and he was out but wasn't; quite ungay, I would say, and yet gay.
- August 24 2021, Shon Faye, “‘I feel like it’s quite shaky acceptance’: trans kids and the fight for inclusion”, in The Guardian:
- In March 2017, a 90-year-old second world war veteran called Patricia Davies came out as a transgender woman and began taking hormones, shortly after discussing her lifelong gender dysphoria with her doctor.
- To be deducted from.
- That comes out of my paycheck.
- To express one's opinion openly.
- You had come out in favor of the French Revolution.
- (of the sun, moon or stars) To become visible in the sky as a result of clouds clearing away.
- It's quite warm now the sun's come out.
- To go on strike, especially out of solidarity with other workers.
- We got the folks at the Detroit plant to come out too.
- To make a debut in a new field.
- 1999, “Shanghai”, in The Book of the World (Atlas), Second United States edition, Macmillan, →ISBN, LCCN 98-20881, OCLC 1144581951, page 411, column 1:
- By the year 2000, Shanghai is scheduled to become an international center of commerce and finance; economic strategists predict that by 2010 the city will have become the world's largest trading center. This "secret capital" of China has set some ambitious goals for itself. The population is proudly celebrating their collective "coming out," and business is booming.
Derived terms
Translations
to exit
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to be discovered, be revealed
to be published, be issued
cricket: to walk to the field
to come out of the closet — see come out of the closet
express opinion
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Anagrams
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