come together

English

Pronunciation

Verb

come together (third-person singular simple present comes together, present participle coming together, simple past came together, past participle come together)Category:English lemmas#COMETOGETHERCategory:English verbs#COMETOGETHERCategory:English phrasal verbs#COMETOGETHERCategory:English phrasal verbs formed with %22together%22#COMETOGETHERCategory:English multiword terms#COMETOGETHERCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#COMETOGETHERCategory:Pages with entries#COME%20TOGETHERCategory:Pages with 1 entry#COME%20TOGETHER

Players of Paris Volley, a professional French men’s volleyball team, coming together for a group hug after scoring a point against the Russian team Guberniya Nizhny Novgorod during the final of the 2013–2014 CEV Cup in Paris, France, on 29 March 2014. The French team went on to win the tournament.
  1. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#COMETOGETHER) To assemble; to congregate; to combine.
    After the attack, we all came together and acted as one.Category:English terms with usage examples#COMETOGETHER
  2. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#COMETOGETHER, figurative) To harmonize socially; to come to an amicable agreement; to ally or band together.
    I told both of them they had better come together on a compromise.Category:English terms with usage examples#COMETOGETHER
    • 1841, “Assumpsit”, in Supplement to The Jurist; Containing a Digest of All the Reported Cases Decided in the Court of Common Law, Equity, Admiralty, and in the Ecclesiastical Courts; Published during the Year 1840; and a Digest of the Statutes Passed during the Same Period, volume IV, London: S. Sweet, Chancery Lane; and V. & R. Stevens and G. S. Norton, Portugal Street and Bell Yard, Lincoln's Inn; Dublin: Hodges and Smith, College Green, →OCLC, page 9, column 1:
      A. and his wife boarded and lodged in the house of B., the brother of A., and both A. and his wife assisted B. in carrying on his business. A. brought an action for the services, to which B. pleaded a set-off for board and lodging:—Held, that neither the services on the one hand, nor the board and lodging on the other, could be charged for, unless the jury were satisfied that the parties came together on the terms that they were to pay and to be paid; but that, if that were not so, no ex post facto charge could be made on either side. Davies v. Davies, 9 Car. & P. 87,—Williams J.
      Category:English terms with quotations#COMETOGETHER
  3. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#COMETOGETHER, figurative) To begin proceeding correctly; for a complex plan with many components to work out eventually.
    I thought the reorganization would be a disaster, but you made it come together.Category:English terms with usage examples#COMETOGETHER
  4. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: to come togetherCategory:&lit not valid pagename.
    1. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#COMETOGETHER) To meet.
      • 1584, [John Lyly], Campaspe. Played before the Queenes Maiestie on Newyeares Day, at Night, by Her Maiesties Children, and the Children of Paules, London: Imprinted at London for Thomas Cadman, →OCLC; republished as Campaspe: Played beefore the Queenes Maiestie on Twelfe Day at Night, by Her Maiesties Children, and the Children of Paules, London: Imprinted at London by Thomas Orwin, for William Broome, 1591, →OCLC, Act V, scene iv:
        Apelles, take Campaſpe, why moue ye not? Campaſpe, take Apelles, wil it not be? If you be aſhamed one of the other, by my conſent you ſhall neuer come together. But diſſemble not Campaſpe, do you loue Apelles?
        Category:English terms with quotations#COMETOGETHER
    2. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#COMETOGETHER) To arrive at a destination with someone after having travelled there with each other.
      We bumped into each other earlier, so we came together in a taxi.Category:English terms with usage examples#COMETOGETHER
    3. (intransitiveCategory:English intransitive verbs#COMETOGETHER, slangCategory:English slang#COMETOGETHER) To achieve orgasm at the same time.
      • 2014 August 27, Darryl Terry, chapter 23, in A Weekend with Lana, [Bloomington, Ind.]: Xlibris, →ISBN:
        Her hands stroked him while he fondled her and both of their emotions began speeding out of control. She gasped, her face a changing wave of love and tenderness and when they came together she sobbed and held on to him as if they would never be together again.
        Category:English terms with quotations#COMETOGETHER

Translations

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