2021-11-03
20 分钟Hi there, this is Harry, and welcome back to my lessons where I try to help you to get a better understanding of the english language.
And hopefully I give you some help along the way where you can be able to communicate better.
You can understand it better when you read a magazine article or newspaper, or you're listening to something, or even if you're getting ready and preparing yourself for some english test.
All of this will come in handy and will certainly help you.
At the end of the particular lesson, I'm going to give you my contact details for you, or if there's any person you know that might benefit from what we're doing, certainly share my contact details with them.
And as always, I would appreciate it greatly if you could subscribe to our channel and you can download and listen to the podcast wherever you may be.
Okay, so this is all helpful English, I hope.
And what we have for you today is a lesson about collocations.
And in particular, we're talking about collocations with the word come.
C o M e, collocations with the word come.
A lot of people get confused and they've asked me to give a little bit of a mention to this and how we can use it.
Okay, so what I'm going to do, go down through each of them one by one, and then I'll go back over them and give you some examples.
Okay, let's get started.
Come to life, come in peace, come into play, come to mind, come to light, come up trumps, not Donald Trump.
Come up trumps, come clean, come of age, have come a long way, and finally not know whether you are coming or going.
Not know whether you're coming or going.
Okay, so I'm going to go through them, explain it, and hopefully give you an example.
And again, if you don't understand it, go back over it, listen to it a second time.
It'll probably help you, or indeed, write to me and I'll try to explain it in a little bit more detail if I can.
But usually the examples are sufficient.