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Wiktionary
come back

vb. 1 (context intransitive English) To return to a place. 2 (lb en intransitive) To return to one's possession, especially of memories. 3 (lb en intransitive) To return to a former state, usually a desirable one. 4 (lb en intransitive) To retort.

WordNet
come back
  1. v. come back to place where one has been before, or return to a previous activity [syn: return, go back, get back]

  2. be restored; "Her old vigor returned" [syn: return]

  3. go back to something earlier; "This harks back to a previous remark of his" [syn: hark back, return, recall]

  4. even the score, in sports

  5. answer back [syn: retort, repay, return, riposte, rejoin]

Wikipedia
Come Back (Jessica Garlick song)

"Come Back" is a single released by Welsh pop singer Jessica Garlick which was the UK entry for 2002 Eurovision Song Contest.

The song was written by Martyn Baylay then an airline pilot from Birmingham who prior to "Come Back" had made seven unsuccessful attempts to place a composition in the UK national preselection round for Eurovision aka A Song For Europe. Baylay would recall: "I had always tried to deliberately write a song for the Contest, I would try anything to get in, I studied form so to speak and tried to create the perfect contest song. None of this was successful, so when I thought I don't care about formula any more, I sent in 'Come Back' and it won [A Song For Europe 2002]." The demo of "Come Back" submitted to the BBC to consider for A Song For Europe featured vocalist Bernie Nolan.

After "Come Back" had been selected as one of the eight Song For Europe 2002 finalists, the BBC's Eurovision executive producer Kevin Bishop contacted the station's Music & Media Partnership managing director Rick Blaskey who'd recall Bishop advising him that "Come Back" "was written by a pilot from Birmingham who doesn't know anyone in the business and needs some help". Blaskey considered "Come Back" "my favourite song in the competition, so the next day I met the writer and contacted [ Atomic Kitten producers] Bill Padley and Jeremy Godfrey. They said exactly what I said, that this was a potential winner". Blaskey had the idea of having a Pop Idol contestant perform the song and on learning that Jessica Garlick had stated a longtime ambition to compete at Eurovision she was recruited: Garlick would recall: It... all happened so quickly, I got the phone call on Monday [January 21, 2002] and recorded the song on Wednesday." "Come Back" was announced as the UK entrant for Eurovision 2002 following the March 3 television broadcast of A Song For Europe 2002 on March 3, 2002, Garlick's performance of the song having solicited 68000 televotes - 40000 more than second place.

On the night of competition for Eurovision 2002 - 25 May 2002 at the Saku Suurhall Arena in Tallinn, Estonia - "Come Back" was performed second, following Cyprus' One with " Gimme" and preceding Austria's Manuel Ortega with " Say A Word." For her Eurovision appearance, Garlick wore a dark red gown which was shredded from the waist down. She was accompanied on stage by five backing singers dressed in white.

The final tally for "Come Back" was 111 points, which technically tied "Come Back" with the Estonian entrant " Runaway" performed by Sahlene for a distant third place behind the entrants from Malta: " 7th Wonder" by Ira Losco and the Eurovision 2002 winner " I Wanna by Marie N of Latvia. "Come Back" is often cited as having finished third at Eurovision 2002, although in the contest's official rankings "Runaway" is afforded third place and "Come Back" fourth, the preferment of "Runaway" being due to its two first place votes (from Latvia and Sweden) while "Come Back" received only one first place vote (from Austria). Whether considered a third or fourth place finisher, "Come Back" remains the highest ranked UK entrant at Eurovision since the #2 finish of "Where are You?" by Imaani in 1998, "Come Back" being the first UK entrant to score a Top Ten finish at Eurovision since "Where Are You?". (The UK entrant for Eurovision 2009: " It's My Time" by Jade Ewen would considerably best "Come Back"'s point total with a tally of 173 points: despite earning the most points for any UK entrant since the 227 points earned by " Love Shine a Light" by Katrina and the Waves afforded the last-named number a landslide Eurovision 1997 victory, "It's My Time"'s point tally only resulted in a #5 placing at Eurovision 2009.) The UK resurgence at Eurovision would be short-lived as at Eurovision 2003 the UK entry " Cry Baby" by Jemini would finish last with zero points.

"Come Back" debuted at the No. 13 on the UK Singles Chart dated for May 25, 2002: its strong showing on the May 25 night of competition for Eurovision 2002 failed to buoy the popularity of the track which dropped out of the Top 30 over the next three weeks, overall spending a total of six weeks in the chart.

Come Back (Chicane song)

"Come Back" is the first official single taken from the 2010 Chicane album Giants. The song is a re-work of a classic Paul Young track - "Come Back and Stay" from 1983. "Come Back" was digitally released on 24 May 2010.

Come Back (The J. Geils Band song)

"Come Back" is a song written by Seth Justman and Peter Wolf that was first released by The J. Geils Band on their 1980 album Love Stinks. "Come Back" was the first single released from the album, and reached the US Top 40, peaking at #32 and remaining in the Top 40 for five weeks. It peaked at #24 for three weeks in Canada. It also made Billboard's Club Play Singles chart, peaking at #69. The song remains in the rotation of classic rock radio stations.

Justman provides extensive keyboards, which Associated Press critic James Simon feels gives the song "a little extra zing."

Rolling Stone Magazine critic Dave Marsh praised "Come Back" as a "full-scale showcase" for the band, claiming that it came "very close to the topnotch hard rock Geils has always threatened to make and too rarely delivered." On the other hand, in the 4th edition of The New Rolling Stone Album Guide, critic Rob Sheffield calls the song a "failed Eurodisco experiment." Boston Globe critic Steve Morse describes the song as " discoish." Bill Flanagan, writing in the Boston Globe remarked that although "Come Back" has an "upbeat surface," the song conveys the anxiety that lurks below. Craig Allen of NJ 101.5 describes the song as an "overlooked 1980 J. Geils gem."

Subsequent to its initial appearance on Love Stinks, "Come Back" was released on several J. Geils Band compilation albums, including Flashback: The Best of the J. Geils Band, Centerfold, The Very Best J. Geils Band Album Ever and Best of The J. Geils Band. In the Netherlands, it was also released as the B-side of the 12" maxi-single " Centerfold."

Full House, a band that includes former J. Geils Band bassist Danny Klein, covers "Come Back" in concert.

Usage examples of "come back".

He intended to take a short vacation-the seashore, I believe he said-and then come back and start all over again.

Bella smiled pertly, delighted with her hoydenish treatment of him and smug in the knowledge that he would come back for more of the same.

Those childhood phantoms had vanisbed by the time I was six or seven, but they had come back again, and I knew if I made a sound they would swarm around me.

Then, when the aches were just beginning to ebb, Lierin had by some miracle come back to him like a wraith out of the night, and here she lay in gentle repose where he could feast his eyes upon her.

He moved her hand, making her aware of his needs, and he saw the wide-spreading confusion come back in her face.

Errtu had been grimly satisfied when Kessell had come back into the Cryshal-Tirith and confirmed, through the use of scrying mirrors, that the other two towers had fallen to pieces.

But Bruenor unexpectedly ordered the tunnel experts to come back out of the shafts and the dwarves to hold their line.

Let Cassius come back and find us sitting on the doorstep of his town!