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Definition

To reach a stage of development or maturity where one has achieved strength and confidence, economic security, or respect and social acceptance.

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In Context

  • "And not only did he learn by experience, but instincts long dead became alive again. The domesticated generations fell from him. . . . [T]he old tricks . . . came to him without effort or discovery, as though they had been his always. . . . [T]he ancient song surged through him and he came into his own again."
  • "Sally just swept along smiling at every one. . . . Sally looked just as if she had come into her own and was made for it; I never did see her look so pretty."
  • "The eyes of the wood-cutter flash like actual possession. He seems now to have come into his own. With all his senses, he is dominant, sure."
  • "Everywhere the people would come into their own, and war and tyranny would vanish like a hateful nightmare! Speaker after speaker got up to proclaim this glorious future."
  • "Aerial photography was coming into its own, and flying shutterbugs pushed the envelope, striving to outsnap each other."
  • "The subsequent decade played host to numerous stories of Asian nations coming into their own with robustly growing economies."
  • ""We have some areas on the Mallaig line where you have no road access at all," Phil explains. "This is where the road-rail vehicles come into their own.""