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come out of
Also,. Issue, proceed, or result from, as in What good can come out of all this wrangling? or Where are these questions coming from? or What do you think will come of this change? The first term dates from the early 1600s, the second from the early 1200s, and the third from the late 1500s. Also see where one is coming from.
Example Sentences
When Danny DeVito arrives — camera off — on our video call with Charlie Day late last month to discuss the 17th season of “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” he apologizes for sounding like he has “just come out of the salt mines.”
“Somewhere around March or so, I said I need to start participating because this is my life, and it is the life of my legacies — my nieces and nephews — and it’s my country,” said Wilson, who added that attending the nationwide “Hands Off” protest in early April made her come out of her post-election slump.
The founder of Madison Court Community Coalition, a grassroots youth engagement organization in Lakewood, Ohio, told Salon she understands and respects Black Americans’ decision to pull back from the frontlines of activism, having come out of the election feeling “dejected” herself.
After day one, Harry Brook doubled down, repeating what has always come out of this England dressing room on the topic.
It is, in fact, one of the ugliest pieces of legislation to come out of Congress in living memory.
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