come at

Verb

 * 1)  To come to; to attend.
 * 2)  To enter into sexual relations with; to come on to (someone).
 * 3) To get to, especially with effort or difficulty.
 * His precise meaning was not easy to come at.
 * 1) To attack (someone); to harass (someone); to challenge (someone) to a fight.
 * As I backed away, he came at me with a knife.
 * , Paul Keating, quoted in 2001, Brett Evans, The Life and Soul of the Party: A Portrait of Modern Labor, |%22comes+at%22%22coming+at%22|%22came+at%22+australia+-intitle:%22%22+-inauthor:%22%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=wHsuT6WzOcWXiAeMo7HsDg&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=%22come%20at%22|%22comes%20at%22%22coming%20at%22|%22came%20at%22%20australia%20-intitle%3A%22%22%20-inauthor%3A%22%22&f=false page 17,
 * ‘He thought he′d come at the Australian Labor Party from the left. He thought he′d tie up the Catholic Church and the East Timor constituency by coming at Labor from that quarter. That′s what it has been all about.’
 * 1)  To accept (a situation); to agree to do; to try.
 * Nah, mate – I′m not going to come at that again. Too risky.
 * 1)  To accept (a situation); to agree to do; to try.
 * Nah, mate – I′m not going to come at that again. Too risky.

Translations

 * Finnish:, käydä päälle, käydä kimppuun
 * French:
 * Polish: atakować / nachodzić
 * Portuguese:
 * Spanish: