Sentence examples for comes to mean from inspiring English sources

Exact(22)

In the popular imagination, ill-fed by weak criticism, postmodernism comes to mean both "exalting disreputable genres like the crime story" (in Lethem's words) while simultaneously meaning a nouveau roman-style move away from plot itself.

And so "authentic comes to mean its opposite.

"Honest," in this sense, comes to mean nothing more than "said with a straight face".

Security comes to mean a padlock on the door, rather than the vigilant eyes of neighbours.

There is a point, in all things, when responsible compliance comes to mean complicity in our own government's recklessness.

For his part Mr. Fellowes has accepted that whatever "Downton Abbey" comes to mean for foreign audiences is ultimately beyond his influence.

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Similar(37)

The word sutra, originally meaning "thread," came to mean such concise expressions.

It has come to mean that much.

Yes, failure has come to mean triumph.

But the team have come to mean too much.

The concept of it came to mean a univ.

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