come across

high frequencyGeneralBusinessAcademic

๐Ÿ”Š Pronunciation

/kสŒm ษ™หˆkrษ’s/
Stress: primary stress on particle (across)
particle 'across' maintains full pronunciation

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ‘งโ€๐Ÿ‘ฆ Word Family

Word Class Forms
Verbs come across, comes across, coming across, came across
No derived forms; maintains phrasal verb structure in all uses

๐Ÿ“ Phrasal Verb Structure

Base verb: comeParticle: across
Transitivity: both

๐Ÿ“– Meanings

Meaning 1

to find or discover something by chance
Formal equivalent: encounter, discover, find

SEMI-LITERAL

“I came across an interesting article while reading the newspaper”
“We came across some old photos in the attic”
“She came across her missing keys under the sofa”

Meaning 2

to appear or seem to others in a particular way
Formal equivalent: appear, seem

ABSTRACT

“He comes across as very confident in meetings”
“The presentation came across well to the audience”
“She comes across as quite shy at first”

โš ๏ธ Separability Rules

Rule: INSEPARABLE

Pronoun Placement

โœ“ came across it
โœ“ come across them
โŒ came it across

๐Ÿ’ก Think of it Like This

Imagine walking along a path and physically crossing over something unexpected
Memory aid: Picture crossing a bridge and finding treasure on the other side
Reflects English speakers' conception of discovery as movement through space

๐Ÿ“ Usage Patterns

Grammatical Contexts

Imperative: “Come across as more confident in interviews”
Continuous: “I'm constantly coming across spelling mistakes”
Perfect: “I've come across this problem before”
Passive: “This document was come across during the investigation”
Modal: “You might come across this term in your reading”
Question: “How did you come across this information?”
Negative: “I haven't come across that word before”

Common in:

researchreadinginvestigationcasual discovery

โš ๏ธ Common Errors

โŒ I came the book acrossโ†’โœ“ I came across the book
Attempting to separate an inseparable phrasal verb
Common for: Languages with separable verbs like German

High impact

โŒ He comes over as friendlyโ†’โœ“ He comes across as friendly
Confusion with similar phrasal verb 'come over'
โŒ I am coming across to the storeโ†’โœ“ I am coming over to the store
Using wrong phrasal verb for physical movement
โŒ She comes across to me like angryโ†’โœ“ She comes across to me as angry
Wrong preposition after 'come across'
โŒ We came across by chanceโ†’โœ“ We met by chance
Missing required object with first meaning

๐Ÿ“Š Register & Alternatives

Formality: neutral

Single-verb alternatives

Formal: encounter, discover, manifest
Neutral: find, seem, appear
Informal: bump into, run into
Use phrasal verb: everyday conversation, casual writing
Use single verb: formal academic writing, legal documents

๐ŸŒ Etymology

Origin: Developed from literal meaning of physical crossing