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Example sentences for "what comes"

  • That is what comes of doing what I like instead of what you like.

  • That's what comes of living in this sort of place.

  • I am only sorry this is nothing but mutton-broth; but that's what comes of sudden arrivals, Oliver.

  • All this presupposes much labour executed by him in person; or, what comes to the same thing, by others whom he has paid.

  • When summ'd, what comes it to more than the halter?

  • The whole of what is annually either collected or produced by the labour of every society, or, what comes to the same thing, the whole price of it, is in this manner originally distributed among some of its different members.

  • That's what comes of having planked white fish for dinner," said Ne'er Do Eel.

  • Importance with respect to what comes after; power to influence or produce an effect; value; moment; rank; distinction.

  • Further, that which comes later is assumed by the first through the medium of what comes before.

  • But it must be observed that although man's temporal life in itself ends with death, still it continues dependent in a measure on what comes after it in the future.

  • The greatest devotion is called for at the moment of receiving this sacrament, because it is then that the effect of the sacrament is bestowed, and such devotion is hindered more by what goes before it than by what comes after it.

  • Well,' he said pleasantly, 'what comes next, Miss Herold?

  • Well," he said pleasantly, "what comes next, Miss Herold?

  • This is what comes of interfering,' he thought sulkily; 'I might have had my neck broken!

  • This is what comes of having no children.

  • Lydgate, "I just do what comes before me to do.

  • That is, because this kind of origination is the method which they have adopted, the way taken is from the simple universal, through the particular, to the individual as what comes latest.

  • What comes next is the object to be contemplated.

  • That's what comes of swallowin' the get-rich-fast bug.

  • That's what comes of havin' rich aunts and uncles in the fam'ly, and duckin' real work while you wait for notice from the Surrogate to come on and take your share.

  • That's what comes of foolin' around at college.

  • That's what comes, my dear, of meddling with disabilities.

  • It is what comes of utterly disregarding duty," said Lady Sarah.

  • It is what comes of living in a godless country like Italy," said Lady Amelia.

  • It's nothing to me what comes of the property after I'm gone.

  • While from the standpoint of what precedes it is a fulfilment, it is a liberative expansion with respect to what comes after.

  • From the side of what comes after, it complicates, introducing new problems, unsettling factors.

  • The world does not stop when the successful person pulls out his plum; nor does he stop, and the kind of success he obtains, and his attitude toward it, is a factor in what comes afterwards.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what comes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    hour afterward; long look; what account; what adventure; what appears; what becomes; what cases; what comes; what ground; what had taken place; what hath; what manner; what means; what ought; what passed; what passes; what principle; what relates; what remained; what she; what terms; what while; what you; what you have said; whatsoever things; whatsoever thou