1.
If information, a report, or a telephone call comes in, it is received.
Reports are now coming in of trouble at yet another jail.
PHRASAL VERB: V P
2.
If you have some money coming in, you receive it regularly as your income.
She had no money coming in and no funds.
PHRASAL VERB: usu cont, V P
3.
If someone comes in on a discussion, arrangement, or task, they join it.
Can I ~ here too, on both points?...
He had a designer ~ and redesign the uniforms.
PHRASAL VERB: V P on n, V P
4.
When a new idea, fashion, or product comes in, it becomes popular or available.
It was just when geography was really beginning to change and lots of new ideas were coming in...
PHRASAL VERB: V P
5.
If you ask where something or someone comes in, you are asking what their role is in a particular matter.
Rose asked again, ‘But where do we ~, Henry?’...
PHRASAL VERB: V P
6.
When the tide comes in, the water in the sea gradually moves so that it covers more of the land.
? go out
PHRASAL VERB: V P