| come in | be received; "News came in of the massacre in Rwanda" | en |
| come in | enter, arrive | en |
| come in | to insert between other elements; "She interjected clever remarks" | en |
| come in | take a place in a competition; often followed by an ordinal; "Jerry came in third in the Marathon" | en |
| come in | come into fashion; become fashionable | en |
| come in | When the tide comes in, the water in the sea gradually moves so that it covers more of the land. go out | en |
| come in | to come or go into; "the boat entered an area of shallow marshes" | en |
| come in | If you ask where something or someone comes in, you are asking what their role is in a particular matter. Rose asked again, `But where do we come in, Henry?' | en |
| come in | If you have some money coming in, you receive it regularly as your income. She had no money coming in and no funds | en |
| come in | If information, a report, or a telephone call comes in, it is received. Reports are now coming in of trouble at yet another jail | en |
| come in | If someone comes in on a discussion, arrangement, or task, they join it. Can I come in here too, on both points? He had a designer come in and redesign the uniforms | en |
| come in | When a new idea, fashion, or product comes in, it becomes popular or available. It was just when geography was really beginning to change and lots of new ideas were coming in | en |
| come in for | be subject to or the object of; "The governor came in for a lot of criticism | en |
| come in for | be subject to or the object of; "The governor came in for a lot of criticism" | en |
| come in for | receive; be subject to, be the object of (e.g., "The actor came in for a lot of criticism") | en |
| come in for | If someone or something comes in for criticism or blame, they receive it. The plans have already come in for fierce criticism in many quarters of the country | en |