Dictionary Workbench Ondict

come on

Dictionary entry view. Switch to definition mode above when you know the meaning but not the word.

come on

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
come onOh come on! We don't have all day!Come on, you two, we're going to be late.come on!Come on! We're already late!Here boy, come on Pecos, good dog.come on in/over/up etcSure, I said, come on over.It sounded good, it felt good to say, it made lights come on in my mouth.A light suddenly comes on in the closet, revealing the hidden police officers Loach and Escobar.Street lights were starting to come on in the distance, crimson slivers slowly brightening to orange.Suddenly, all the lights came on in the hospital and they eventually opened a side-door and let her in.Lights came on in the Mootwalk shops as one by one they began to open.It sometimes comes on in the open air.Automatic lights had come on in various parts of the house.come on strongThe Republicans were coming on strong.But the defense came on strong in the playoffs.He'd come on strong towards the end of his round to pull up within a shot of us.
ˈcome-on noun [countable usually singular] informal  ATTRACTED TO somebodysomething that someone does deliberately to make someone else sexually interested in them 引诱,诱惑,勾引 Rick’s the kind of guy who thinks every smile is a come-on. 里克是那种认为别人笑一笑就是勾引他的家伙。give somebody the come-on (=do something to show you are sexually interested in someone) 勾引某人 come on to somebody/something at come on
Examples from the Corpus
come-onBut his basic belief was so widespread that gay men themselves sometimes used it as a come-on.The free stationery is just a come-on; we want to get kids writing to penpals around the world.It's a come-on for their other-paid-for-services.Instead there was true obscenity, the obscenity of deceitfulness and come-on lies.Four years ago, he was a bit tentative in his come-on.Will women respond to the Republicans' simplistic come-on?Hoping against hope that she was giving him the come-on at last, he readily accepted.Others want to keep him in action where he is, a historical fact and tourist come-on.But it's the undertow of precocious sexuality, the child-woman come-on, that's more worrying.give somebody the come-onHoping against hope that she was giving him the come-on at last, he readily accepted.
ˈcome-on nounChineseSyllable
to make someone deliberately that Corpus does something


come on

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++come on  come on at come1(PHRASAL VERB)


come on
come on phrasal verb (see also come)
1. come on! spoken
  a. used to tell someone to hurry:
    Come on, we’ll be late!
  b. used to encourage someone to do something:
    Come on, you can do it!
    Come on, cheer up!
  c. used to tell someone that you know that what they have just said was not true or right:
    Oh come on, don’t lie!
  d. used to make someone angry enough to want to fight you:
    Come on, then, hit me!
2. come on in/over/up etc spoken used to tell someone to come in, over, up etc, usually in a friendly way:
    Come on in – I’ve made some coffee.
3. if a light or machine comes on, it starts working:
    A dog started barking and lights came on in the house.
4. if an illness comes on, you start to be ill with it:
    I can feel a headache coming on.
5. if a television or radio programme comes on, it starts:
    Just at that moment, the news came on.
6. if rain or snow comes on, it starts:
    The rain came on just before lunchtime.
7. to come onto a stage or sports field:
    He scored only two minutes after he’d come on.
8. to improve or make progress:
    The children are really coming on now.
    Your English is coming on really well.
9. come on somebody/something to find or discover someone or something by chance:
    We came on a group of students having a picnic.
10. come on strong informal to make it very clear to someone that you think they are sexually attractive


ˌcome ˈon(of an actor 演员) to walk onto the stage 登台;出场;上场(of a player 运动员) to join a team during a game (比赛中)上场Owen came on for Brown ten minutes before the end of the game. 终场前十分钟,欧文上场替换了布朗。🔊🔑 (informal) to improve or develop in the way you want 改进;改善;发展;完善The project is coming on fine. 这项工程进展顺利。🔊🔊🔑 used in orders to tell sb to hurry or to try harder (用于命令)赶快,加把劲Come on! We don't have much time. 快点!我们时间不多了。🔊🔊Come on! Try once more. 加把劲!再试一次。🔊🔑 used to show that you know what sb has said is not correct (表示知道某人所说的话不正确)得了吧Oh, come onyou know that isn't true! 咳,得了吧,你知道那不是真的!🔊🔊 (usually used in the progressive tenses 通常用于进行时) (of an illness or a mood 疾病或心情) to begin 开始I can feel a cold coming on. 我觉得要感冒了。🔊I think there's rain coming on. 我看要下雨了。🔊come on to do sth It came on to rain. 天下起雨来了。🔊(of a TV programme, etc. 电视节目等) to start 开始What time does the news come on? 新闻报道什么时候开始?🔊🔊🔑 to begin to operate 开始运转(或运行)Set the oven to come on at six. 把烤箱设定在六点钟开始烘烤。🔊🔊When does the heating come on? 什么时间来暖气?🔊
See also come