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InicioLibro de texto de inglésPhase 2The "Come" Universe - Come across, Come up with, Come about
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The "Come" Universe - Come across, Come up with, Come about

Last updated: 6 de mayo de 2026

The laptop screen is a blur of spreadsheets. You’re in a coffee shop, trying to finish a report, but the caffeine isn't working. You scroll through a design blog for a five-minute escape, and that's when you see it. An old photo of a building you swear you’ve seen before.

Cultural Note

The 'working from a coffee shop' culture is very common in Western cities, but might be less so elsewhere. It implies a certain kind of flexible, modern work life.

The verb come isn't just about moving from one place to another. In English, it’s also about how things arrive in your world. Information, ideas, people, problems—they all “come” to you in different ways.

We’re going to look at the three core phrasal verbs in this universe. Master these, and you’ll understand the physics of how life happens to you and for you.

First, there’s come across. This is the engine of accidental discovery. It’s for anything you find by chance, without actively searching for it. You weren't looking for it, but it appeared in your path.

While cleaning the attic, I came across my dad's old vinyl records.

Note:The feeling here is surprise and nostalgia. The discovery was a happy accident, not a planned search.

Then you have come up with. This is the engine of creation. It’s when an idea, a plan, a solution, or even an excuse is born inside your mind. You generate it yourself.

We need a new marketing slogan by noon, but I can't come up with anything.

Note:This communicates mental effort and pressure. The person is trying to 'pull' an idea from their brain, but it isn't working.

Most people get these two. The pivot is understanding the third one: come about.

If come across is a personal accident and come up with is a personal creation, come about is an impersonal history. It asks: “What is the origin story of this situation?” It’s how you explain the series of events that caused something to exist, often something big and complex that you didn't create alone.

The argument came about because of a simple misunderstanding over the text message.

Note:This is a neutral, factual explanation. It's like a reporter stating the cause of an event without placing blame.

How did your plan to move to Spain come about?

Note:This is a common question asking for the 'origin story' of a major life decision. It invites the other person to narrate the history.

The Final Boss: Your Personal Event Horizon

These three verbs draw a map of your personal universe. Come across describes things crossing your event horizon from the outside world—luck, chance, fate. Come up with describes things you generate from within your own gravity—creativity, intellect, and effort. They define the boundary between what the world gives you and what you give the world.

Come about is different. It’s the physicist’s tool. It lets you step outside your own timeline to describe how a system was formed. You’re not a participant; you’re an observer explaining the cause-and-effect that led to the present moment. It’s the most objective and detached of the three.

The Golden Rule: Use come across for things you find. Use come up with for ideas you create. Use come about for situations you explain.

Related Vocabulary
stumble upon- to find something by chance (A perfect synonym for `come across`)

I stumbled upon a great little cafe while exploring the city.

I stumbled upon a great little cafe while exploring the city.

think up- to invent a plan or idea (A more informal version of `come up with`)

My little brother is always thinking up new games to play.

My little brother is always thinking up new games to play.

arise from- to emerge from a source or situation (A more formal verb for how things `come about`)

Many complications arose from the new policy.

Many complications arose from the new policy.

dawn on- when a fact or idea suddenly becomes obvious to you (An idea 'coming' to you)

It finally dawned on me that I had left my wallet at the restaurant.

It finally dawned on me that I had left my wallet at the restaurant.

crop up- for a problem or issue to appear unexpectedly (A problem 'coming' to you)

A few technical issues cropped up during the presentation.

A few technical issues cropped up during the presentation.

run into- to meet someone by accident (A social version of `come across`, but for people)

I ran into my old professor at the supermarket.

I ran into my old professor at the supermarket.

Equipo del Proyecto Dicread

Dicread es una plataforma de aprendizaje de idiomas diseñada para ayudarte a dominar el inglés práctico. Desglosamos la gramática compleja y el vocabulario en contenido simple y fácil de entender.