come into
101come into your own — be your natural best, find your voice, realize your potential After five years in medicine, he came into his own. He became an excellent doctor …
102come into full play — allow/give (something) full play if something is given full play, it is used or developed as much as possible. Here, his genius for networking came into full play …
103come into being — to start to exist at the moment when the Earth came into being …
104come into play — to start to happen or have an effect When the new policy comes into play, fewer people will have control …
105come into use — to start being used by people Computers first came into use in the early 1950s …
106ˌcome ˈinto sth — phrasal verb to be an aspect of a situation The argument was over artistic freedom – money never came into it.[/ex] …
107come into — 1. Enter. 2. Comply with, assent to, fall in with …
108To come into play — Play Play, n. 1. Amusement; sport; frolic; gambols. [1913 Webster] 2. Any exercise, or series of actions, intended for amusement or diversion; a game. [1913 Webster] John naturally loved rough play. Arbuthnot. [1913 Webster] 3. The act or… …
109be in/come into profit — ► to be earning, or start to earn, money from a trade or business rather than losing it: »Some want it to be illegal to make anyone redundant if you are in profit. Main Entry: ↑profit …
110come into one's own — phrasal to achieve one s potential; also to gain recognition …