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come from

vb. 1 (context transitive English) To have as one's birthplace or nationality. 2 (context transitive English) To be derived from.

Usage examples of "come from".

Johnny started in that direction, already hearing the song as it would come from under his hand and out of his mouth: 'Oh, Robert Ford, Robert Ford, I wonder how you must feel?

I think about what Adrian said, about how the ghosts in Mother and Son Meadow might live on a slightly different plane, maybe of the astral kind, maybe of the temporal kind, and sometimes (often, really) I think Miss Red might actually come from that plane!

The call had come from Hendorf, who was examining one of the plants: a small bush with large pods, at the center of each of which was a cluster of sharp, thick thorns.

The sound seemed to come from the edge of the forest just ten feet away.

Based on their analysis of crystalline structure and trace impurities in the scrap of metal and the casing of the gun, it was 99 percent probable that the two samples had come from the same original stock.

She paused, wondering where it had come from, and then realized: Richard Wilson must have left his things there when her father had ordered him out of the house.

The kitchen facilities could have come from any low-income suburban home.