come-down teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- To return to a normal state of consciousness
He finally came down from his post-bonus high.
- To descend
Haste ye, and go up to my father, and say unto him, Thus saith thy son Joseph, God hath made me lord of all Egypt: come down unto me, tarry not. - 1611, King James Version of the Bible (Authorized Version), Genesis 45:9.
- To reach a decision
I can't guess which way the board will come down on the project.
- To visit, to travel in order to meet
Come down and see me later.
- To be passed through time
Much wisdom has come down in the form of proverbs.
- To decrease
Real estate prices have come down since the peak of the boom.
- come down the pike
- to emerge, come up, present itself
- come down to
- To reach by moving down or reducing
Come down to my place someday and have lunch.
- come down to
- To depend upon, basically, ultimately or in essence
The game is going to come down to the last five seconds.
- come down to us
- To survive to the present day; to be extant in some form
As you’ll have noticed, a large number of pre-Renaissance writings on language have come down to us without any indication of their author’s name, or with a false one attached.
- come down with
- To contract or get; to show symptoms of a minor illness
With a scratchy throat and a cough, it feels like I'm coming down with a cold.
- come on down
- A catchphrase used on the American television game show "The Price is Right," inviting a member of the audience to come to Contestant's Row to play the game
- come on down
- An invitation to someone living to the north to come for a visit
- come on down
- An invitation to someone in the upstairs part of a building to come downstairs
Come on down! Breakfast is ready!.
- come down
- get sick; "She fell sick last Friday, and now she is in the hospital"
- come down to
- (Ev ile ilgili) 1. If a situation or decision comes down to something, that is the thing that influences it most: It all comes down to money in the end.2. If a situation or problem comes down to something, it can be described or explained most simply in that way: What the problem comes down to is whether the consumer will be willing to pay more for a higher quality product
- come down
- be the essential element; "The proposal boils down to a compromise"
- come down
- descend
- come down
- criticize or reprimand harshly; "The critics came down hard on the new play"
- come down
- If something comes down, it falls to the ground. The cold rain came down
- come down
- fall from clouds; "rain, snow and sleet were falling"; "Vesuvius precipitated its fiery, destructive rage on Herculaneum"
- come down
- move downward and lower, but not necessarily all the way; "The temperature is going down"; "The barometer is falling"; "The curtain fell on the diva"; "Her hand went up and then fell again"
- come down
- criticize or reprimand harshly; "The critics came down hard on the new play
- come down
- If the cost, level, or amount of something comes down, it becomes less than it was before. Interest rates should come down If you buy three bottles, the bottle price comes down to £2.42 The price of petrol is coming down by four pence a gallon. go up
- come down a peg
- humiliated; lose prestige or position
- come down like a ton of bricks
- hit hard, upbraid or scold someone
- come down on
- If you come down on one side of an argument, you declare that you support that side. He clearly and decisively came down on the side of President Rafsanjani
- come down on
- If you come down on someone, you criticize them severely or treat them strictly. If Douglas came down hard enough on him, Dale would rebel
- come down on
- {f} criticize, punish, say negative things about -, scold
- come down to
- {f} represent something in a fundamental manner; basically amount to; deal with or confront straight to the point; visit (e.g.: "why don't you come down to my house and have a coffee?")
- come down to
- If a problem, decision, or question comes down to a particular thing, that thing is the most important factor involved. Walter Crowley says the problem comes down to money I think that it comes down to the fact that people do feel very dependent on their automobile What it comes down to is, there are bad people out there, and somebody has to deal with them
- come down to earth
- {f} be realistic, be practical, be reasonable
- come down upon
- rebuke, reproach, upbraid, punish
- come down with
- If you come down with an illness, you get it. Thomas came down with chickenpox at the weekend
- come down with
- become sick with -, fall ill with -, get -
- comedown
- decline to a lower status or level
- comedown
- A calm, mellow period experienced after the initial high from taking drugs
- comedown
- {i} decline, reverse, disappointment, anti-climax, sudden descent
- comedown
- A sudden drop to a lower status, condition or level; a disappointment or letdown
- comedown
- come·down in BRIT, also use come-down If you say that something is a comedown, you think that it is not as good as something else that you have just done or had. The prospect of relegation is a comedown for a club that finished second two seasons ago. a situation that is not as good, important, interesting etc as the situation you had previously
- comedown
- A downfall; an humiliation
- go up like a rocket and come down like a stick
- from the peak of prosperity to the depths of despair