1
general::
1. Also, come to pass. Happen, take place, as in How did this quarrel come about? or When did this new development come to pass? Shakespeare used the first term, first recorded in 1315, in Hamlet (5:2): "How these things came about." The variant, dating from the late 1400s, appears often in the Bible, as in, "And it came to pass . . . that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus" (Luke 2:1). 2. Also, go about. In sailing, to change tack (direction), as in It's important to duck under the boom when we come about. [Mid-1500s]
American Heritage Idioms
2
general::
Phrase(s): come about
1. to happen. • How did this damage come about? • This came about due to the windstorm. 2. [for a ship or boat] to turn. • Look how easily this boat comes about. • Now, practice making the boat come about.
McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs