come into something phrasal verb (
see also come)
1. to receive money, land, or property from someone after they have died:
She’ll come into quite a lot of money when her father dies.2. to be involved in something:
Josie doesn’t come into the movie until quite near the end.
Where do I come into all this?3. come into view/sight if something comes into view, you begin to see it:
The mountains were just coming into view.4. come into leaf/flower/blossom to start to produce leaves or flowers:
The roses are just coming into flower.5. not come into it spoken used to say that something is not important:
Money doesn’t really come into it.6. come into your own to become very good, useful, or important in a particular situation:
On icy roads, a four-wheel drive vehicle really comes into its own. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
come into v. To receive, especially after another's death; get possession of.
He came into a lot of money when his father died.
He came into possession of the farm after his uncle died. [TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary ▲