I googled it and nothing really came up except this. I started using this saying and then I googled it and it turns out I didn't make it up!
Happy googling!
Shakespeare's "The Tempest"
In the Suez canal , the pilots used that phrase, addressed to the helmsman, when the ship had come on what the pilot meant was the proper course.
Picking flowers, do you love them or not, it NOT a phrase!
'Spread the word' is already a catch-phrase. Near synomyms are: 'tell the world and his neighbour'; 'tell the world and his wife'; 'put it about'; 'go tell it on the mountain'.
come to me. lets emabrase
Shakespeare's "The Tempest"
the meaning of the phrase "The time has come." is a reference to the death of a person or animal. It means that the time has come for them to leave their life.
I don't know, please tell me
Which phrase does not come from the Preamble to the Constitution?
Prime time as a phrase means the peak time or best time to do something. It has also come to mean the best time for advertisers to buy time on television because it is when most people are watching and will see their adverts.
Only time can tell that answer.
Yes, it is a phrase that indicates time. It will be an adverbial phrase.
In the Suez canal , the pilots used that phrase, addressed to the helmsman, when the ship had come on what the pilot meant was the proper course.
"Your hour is come" is just an old-fashioned way to say "it's your time" (usually meaning "time to die"). The phrase means that the person knows it's his or her time to do whatever it is.
you shouldn't have to think about it when the time is right the words will just come out.
It doesn't have a clear meaning on its own and you'll have to decide what the author meant from the context in which the phrase occurs. "Listen: Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time." - Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse Five
Be patient. The things you desire will come to fruition in their own time.