Come is the conjugation for the future and present tenses, as in "In the future, I will come" or "Come here, right now."
Came is the past tense, as in "Ten years ago, he came here."
N0. Came is the past tense of to come. It is a verb. eg He was supposed to come today but he cameyesterday instead.
conflict came from stupid people that take to fihting; instead of solving an issue
"Come" is used to indicate movement toward the speaker or a specified place, while "came" is the past tense of "come" and is used to indicate that someone or something arrived at a particular place in the past. Use "come" for present or future actions and "came" for actions that have already happened.
There are a great many strong verbs that you can use for the word came. You can use the verb appeared.
Braille came into use by the blind people of the olden days.
"Come" is the past participle form of the verb "come," and it can be used in different tenses depending on the context. In the present tense, you would use "comes" (e.g., he comes to the party). In the past tense, you would use "came" (e.g., he came yesterday).
Depending on the context, you could use... arrived, began or started.
Christopher Columbus came to the Caribbean because he was looking for India and encountered the unknown Americas instead.
Christopher Columbus came to the Caribbean because he was looking for India and encountered the unknown Americas instead.
Judaism came from the same place as Christianity. Islam came from the same place as Christianity. Buddhism, Hinduism, and Sikhism came from modern day India. Those are the big ones.
The word paper came into use in 1341. It is a derivative of the word papyrus.
You came from India, didn't you? For a positive statement use a negative tag. You didn't come from India, did you? For a negative statement use a positive tag.