| a chattering or flighty, light-headed person. |
| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| come up | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | to come to a place regarded as higher |
| 2. | (of the sun) to rise |
| 3. | to begin: a wind came up |
| 4. | to be regurgitated or vomited |
| 5. | to present itself or be discussed: that question will come up again |
| 6. | (Brit) to begin a term, esp one's first term, at a college or university |
| 7. | to appear from out of the ground: my beans have come up early this year |
| 8. | informal to win: have your premium bonds ever come up? |
| 9. | come up against to be faced with; come into conflict or competition with |
| 10. | come up to to equal or meet a standard: that just doesn't come up to scratch |
| 11. | come up with to produce or find: she always comes up with the right answer |
come definitionand cum
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come up
Arise, present itself, as in This question never came up. [Mid-1800s]
Rise (from a lower place to a higher one) as in We'll leave as soon as the sun comes up. [9th century]
Also, come up to. Approach, come near, as in He came up and said hello, or The dog came right up to Nora. [Early 1700s]
Also, come up to. Rise in status or value, be equal to, as in His paintings will never come up to his teacher's, or This officer came up through the ranks. [c. 1600] A variant is come up or rise in the world, used for someone who has risen in rank, wealth, or status; for example, He has really come up in the world
he now owns a yacht, or I could see at once that she was a woman who would rise in the world. Also see the subsequent idioms beginning with come up.