come out

VERB
  1. be issued or published
    Did your latest book appear yet?
    The new Woody Allen film hasn't come out yet
  2. to state openly and publicly one's homosexuality
    This actor outed last year
  3. result or end
    How will the game turn out?
  4. come off
    His hair and teeth fell out
  5. take a place in a competition; often followed by an ordinal
    Jerry came in third in the Marathon
  6. bulge outward
    His eyes popped
  7. be made known; be disclosed or revealed
    The truth will out
  8. break out
    The tooth erupted and had to be extracted
  9. make oneself visible; take action
    Young people should step to the fore and help their peers
  10. come out of
    Water issued from the hole in the wall
    The words seemed to come out by themselves
  11. appear or become visible; make a showing
    She turned up at the funeral
    I hope the list key is going to surface again
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How To Use come out In A Sentence

  • And if you can develop a machine to look for the needle in the haystack and what you come out with from having the machine sift through the haystack is a box of straw, where maybe the needle's in there and maybe a few bonus needles, then that's a whole lot better than having humans try to sift through a haystack. Wired Top Stories
  • Either way, the full story of this apparent scandal must come out. Times, Sunday Times
  • Julian ought to have resigned, then he'd have come out of it with some credit.
  • `Me and Jude we figure you could come out even didn't know you'd decontrol like that "Iz said. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • In August it'll come out in paperback, so it'll be repriced as much cheaper e-book.
  • come out of the closet!
  • More alarming -- not to mention revolting -- than any revelation, which has come out thus far about Bachmann, Kennedy once commented to Democratic political adviser Bobby Baker, "You know, I get a migraine headache if I don't get a strange piece of ass every day" see endnote 54. Lara M. Brown, Ph.D.: Michele Bachmann and Migraines: Presidential Disqualifier or Sexism?
  • They're shy animals and don't often come out in daylight.
  • As I come out with a stack of napkins and some plates, their conversation quiets and dies down, and we all eat.
  • Watching Nixon's henchmen come out of the woodwork to declare their moral indignation at the ethical lapses of Mark Felt was tantamount to watching Liza Minelli criticize someone else for being an an unstable boozehound.
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