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− | '''come through''' (''to survive, to conclude successfully, to perform, to get through'')- zakończyć, wykonać, przejść, przeniknąć, przebijać, przesączyć się. | + | '''come through''' (''to survive, to conclude successfully, to perform, to get through'') - zakończyć, wykonać, przejść, przeniknąć, przebijać, przesączyć się. |
# ''At last I '''came''' it '''through'''. ''[I finished it...] | # ''At last I '''came''' it '''through'''. ''[I finished it...] |
Wersja z 18:16, 31 gru 2015
come through (to survive, to conclude successfully, to perform, to get through) - zakończyć, wykonać, przejść, przeniknąć, przebijać, przesączyć się.
- At last I came it through. [I finished it...]
- She came through Dachau concentration camp. [she survived...]
- He came through a dramatic plane accident. [he survived...]
- Cold is coming through this thin wall. [cold penetrates...]
- The call to the agency came through at 15:59 pm. [the telephone rang at...]
- The fax came through at midnight. [fax arrived...]
- Your e-mail came through before 6 am. [e-mail arrived...]
- The job offer still hasn’t come through. [did not arrive]
- Tell family a bad news when everything is calm, not just as they come through the door. [not as they are around the corner...]
- Paul's disbelief comes through in the questions he asks.
- Ideas come through us, not from us. [ideas penetrate us, not originate from us]
- Good will comes through education not legislation. [is a result od education...]