How to Use come into existence in a Sentence

come into existence

idiom
  • So the Skynet that would have come into existence, if any, wouldn’t be the same as the Skynet that set the plan in motion.
    Jennifer Ouellette and Sean M. Carroll, Ars Technica, 24 Nov. 2023
  • Eight laws have come into existence this year, two in the last week alone.
    Dante Chinni, NBC News, 2 Apr. 2023
  • Because the way that Ashley and I and all of our writers approach things, is as though the story wants to come into existence.
    Lauren Puckett-Pope, ELLE, 17 Jan. 2022
  • Whether the full vision will come into existence is still unclear.
    Sabine Hossenfelder, Scientific American, 19 June 2020
  • Also, sports bras, which didn’t come into existence until the 1970s.
    Susan Lacke, Outside Online, 11 Oct. 2019
  • Plasmas come into existence when a gas cloud has so much energy that electrons are stripped away from the nuclei within the cloud.
    Jake Parks, Discover Magazine, 13 Dec. 2018
  • Now is their opportunity to make that mark and to see that vision of a better world, a more humane and just world, come into existence.
    Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 12 Jan. 2023
  • Unlike Zoom calls, which come into existence when an invite is created and disappear once the call is over, Discord servers and their voice channels are always there.
    Eric Ravenscraft, Wired, 18 Dec. 2020
  • There was also a cavern-deep misunderstanding about how the hotel project was going to come into existence.
    Arkansas Online, 19 Feb. 2023
  • The importance of Tim Cook’s speech was the recognition that Silicon Valley itself could never have come into existence in the current climate.
    WIRED, 15 Jan. 2023
  • There were a few depictions of lesbians in the media but definitely not of anyone my age, and social media had only just come into existence.
    Amelia Abraham, refinery29.com, 15 Dec. 2021
  • Obtaining such a clear image of this young star trio is providing astronomers with new insights into how multi-star systems come into existence.
    Carl Engelking, Discover Magazine, 26 Oct. 2016
  • The academic research community is of course a huge part of how subsequent generations of robots come into existence.
    IEEE Spectrum, 12 Aug. 2022
  • In the world above, empires had risen and fallen; wars and natural disasters had wracked the land; civilizations had sprung up, developed and disappeared; major religions had come into existence and been superseded by others.
    Jo Marchant, Smithsonian Magazine, 3 Nov. 2022
  • The organization had come into existence after Monday’s military takeover.
    New York Times, 6 Feb. 2021
  • From this destruction, individual stars come into existence.
    Ashley Strickland, CNN, 19 May 2021

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'come into existence.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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