Get Free Checker

come to light

VERB
  1. be revealed or disclosed
    The truth finally came to light

How To Use come to light In A Sentence

  • Many of the details of the events leading up to the bombing have come to light in recent months.
  • “But at the same time, it is NOT ‘pointless’ to be enthusiastically, tear-jerkingly, unwaveringly ‘proud’ of the ‘land of your birth’ — to the point where people are actually STILL SURPRISED — or even scandalized — when yet another of ‘our’ scandals come to light.” US in Police State Top 10
  • But another mechanism has come to light: reconsolidation. Times, Sunday Times
  • The conduct that has come to light is an affront to the most basic standards of morality and decency.
  • The original Italian version has recently come to light, discovered in an autograph manuscript held in the Vatican Library.
  • Fresh evidence has recently come to light which suggests that he didn't in fact commit the murder.
  • The government should be beyond and above any misdoing or scam, but time and time again these incidents come to light, make you wonder whatever next?. and also makes you wonder about the other things that have not come to light. Archive 2008-01-01
  • Looking at it so, it was plain that you were _suppressing_ the cameo -- burking it; since, once taken as you had taken it, it could never come to light again. Martin Hewitt, Investigator
  • He based this scholarly conjecture on the fact that a gazelle horn, identified as belonging to a now extinct Tripolitan species, was actually discovered on the island, while an adolescent female skull of the hypo-dolichocephalous (Nepenthean) type had come to light in some excavations at Benghazi. South Wind
  • As I await the return of my mastodontic Bava book from the printer, certain interesting tid-bits of information not privvy to me, or unnoticed by me as I was preparing its 1100+ pages, are beginning to come to light. Archive 2007-05-13
View all