English edit

Verb edit

come to a stop (third-person singular simple present comes to a stop, present participle coming to a stop, simple past came to a stop, past participle come to a stop)

  1. To stop moving or being active; to stop.
    The TV broadcast suddenly came to a stop.
    • 2021, Ed Tarkington, The Fortunate Ones, Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, page 129:
      The car came to a stop in front of the house, and the front door opened, and a little girl—My sister, I thought, as if such a thing were as rare as a white elephant—came bounding out, the dark ringlets of her hair bouncing as she descended the porch steps and stopped to stare at me.
  2. To reach a point where little progress is being made; to come to an impasse; to stop.
    The renovation effort came to a juddering stop due to a lack of funding.

Translations edit

Further reading edit