come round to

listen to the pronunciation of come round to
English - Turkish
(deyim) sonunda başlayabilmek
(deyim) nihayet başlayabilmek
özüne gelmek
ayılmak için
come to
iyileşmek
come to
kalmak
come to
ilgili olmak
come to
kendine gelmek
come to
ayılmak
come round
ziyaret etmek
come to
payına düşmek
come round
yola gelmek
come round
kendi görüşünden caymak
come round
yelkenleri suya indirmek
come round
kendine gelmek
come round
barışmak
come round
dönmek
come round
özüne gelmek
come round
gelmek
come round
ayılmak
come to
varmak

Bir anlaşmaya varmak zorundayız. - We have to come to some agreement.

come to
ulaşmak
Come to
gelin etmek
come round
Adet görmek, aybaşı olmak
come round
tutumunu değiştirmek, razı olmak
come round
(deyim) tutumunu değistirmek,razı olmak
come round
uğramak
come round
(Fiili Deyim ) 1- dönüp gelmek 2- gelmek , uğramak
come round
(deyim) kendine gelmek ,ayilmak
come round
tekrarlanmak
come round
(deyim) ugramak
come round
yıldönümü gelmek
come to
(deyim) ayilmak,kendine gelmek. come to sth. 1.etmek,tutmak,varmak. 2.soz konusu olmak. come to grips with sth. ciddiyetle ele almak come to terms with someone/sth. anlaşmak,uzlaşmak,kabul etmek come to the church (kd) genellikle if/when it comes to the church karar verme/iş yapma zamanı geldiğinde ,durum doruğa vardığnda come to grips with sth. bir mesele ile uğraşmak,gereğine bakmak
come to
gelmek

Tom Mary'nin onun partisine gelmek istediğini duyduğunda gerçekten memnun oldu. - Tom was really glad to hear that Mary wanted to come to his party.

Evime gelmek için zahmet etmeyin. - Don't bother to come to my house.

come to
tutmak
come to
içinde olmak
English - English

Definition of come round to in English English dictionary

come round
to recover consciousness

After the blow to my head, I took a while to come round.

come round
to visit one's home

would you like to come round for dinner tonight?.

come round
to make a regular circuit

What day does the garbage man come round?.

come round
to cease anger or hostility
come round
to change one's opinion

I'll explain it again, and maybe he'll come round to my way of thinking.

come to
To reach; to arrive at

come to a halt.

come to
To total; to amount to

The bill comes to £10 each.

come to
To stop a sailing vessel, especially by turning into the wind. See also come about

The flood had made, the wind was nearly calm, and being bound down the river, the only thing for it was to come to and wait for the turn of the tide.

come to
To befall; to affect; to happen to; to come upon

I pray no harm will come to you.

come to
To regard or specify, as narrowing a field of choices by category

When it comes to remorseless criminals, this guy takes the cake.

come to
To recover consciousness after fainting etc

She came to with the aid of smelling salts.

come to
To devote attention to in due course; to come around to

I'll come to your question in a minute.

come round
see come around
come round
change one's position or opinion; "He came around to our point of view"
come round
recover, recuperate (from a illness); change one's mind
come round
change one's position or opinion; "He came around to our point of view
come to
When someone who is unconscious comes to, they recover consciousness. When he came to and raised his head he saw Barney. = come around
come to
attain; "The horse finally struck a pace"
come to
have to do with or be relevant to; "There were lots of questions referring to her talk"; "My remark pertained to your earlier comments"
come to
cause to experience suddenly; "Panic struck me"; "An interesting idea hit her"; "A thought came to me"; "The thought struck terror in our minds"; "They were struck with fear"
come to
inherit, gain possession; recover, regain consciousness; add up to
come to
return to consciousness; "The patient came to quickly"; "She revived after the doctor gave her an injection"
come to
attain; "The horse finally struck a pace
come round to

    Turkish pronunciation

    kʌm raund tı

    Pronunciation

    /ˈkəm ˈround tə/ /ˈkʌm ˈraʊnd tə/

    Etymology

    [ 'k&m ] (verb.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English cuman; akin to Old High German queman to come, Latin venire, Greek bainein to walk, go.
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