The word "comest" comes from Middle English, specifically the second person singular form of the verb "to come." It is not commonly used in modern English, but can be found in older texts or poetry.
'When did I come' is correct. In this sentence, the verb 'come' should be in its base form 'come' after the auxiliary verb 'did'.
It is also "come." infinitive: to come past: came past participle: come
It is also "come." infinitive: to come past: came past participle: come
The present perfect tense of "come" is "has/have come."
The future tense of "come" is "will come."
Absolutely nothing. You were doing fine until the word "naught". "Thou comest" is the singular form of "you come" which is now somewhat obsolete. Reversing the order into "comest thou" makes it a question, as "Are you coming" is the question form of "You are coming". "Hither" means "toward here" or "toward me", although the direction is already implied by the use of the word "come". Thus "Comest thou hither" means the same as "Are you coming here" which is all well and good. But the word "naught" means "nothing", so "Comest thou hither naught" means "Are you coming here nothing." which means . . . naught.
I think it means (I'm going out on a limb here): You, come over here. Thou= you comest= come hither= over here I did not get this from an official source, but using my knowledge of media and context clues, I'm 99.9% sure I'm right. The only doubt is that I did not get this from an official source.
In the King James version the word - come - appears 1971 times the word - comers - appears once the word - comest - appears 29 times the word - cometh - appears 282 times
What is thy name? and wherefore comest thou hither, Before King Richard in his royal lists? Against whom comest thou? and what's thy quarrel? Speak like a true knight, so defend thee heaven!William Shakespeare: King Richard the Second, Act I, Scene III, spoken by the Lord Marshall to an unrecognised knight, who replies that he is Harry of Hereford etc.
That depends on which translation you are reading. Some may say 'arrive' or 'be present' or other expressions instead of 'come'. --answer-- In the King James version the word - come - appears 1971 times the word - comest - appears 29 times the word - cometh - appears 282 times
That depends on which translation you are reading. Some may say 'arrive' or 'be present' or other expressions instead of 'come'. --answer-- In the King James version the word - come - appears 1971 times the word - comest - appears 29 times the word - cometh - appears 282 times
It was one of the two criminals being crucified with Jesus in Luke 23:42 who said " Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom.
You fall flat on your face. You're embarassed.
It does not specify one side or the other. The thief Who asked Jesus: "Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom." The other thief "railed on him, saying, If thou be Christ, save thyself and us." Luke 23:39,42.
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The duration of Come Come Come Upward is 2.23 hours.
Come Come Come Upward was created on 1989-03-03.