Pronunciation: /kʌm daʊn ɒn/
verb to criticize or reprimand someone strongly
A1 The teacher came down on the student for not completing their homework.
A2 The boss came down on the employees for not meeting their sales targets.
B1 The government has come down on companies that violate environmental regulations.
B2 The judge came down hard on the defendant for committing a serious crime.
C1 The media often comes down harshly on politicians for their controversial decisions.
C2 The public came down heavily on the company for their unethical business practices.
preposition a word that shows the relationship between a noun (or pronoun) and other words in a sentence, in this case indicating the direction or target of the action
A1 The teacher always comes down on students who don't do their homework.
A2 My parents always come down on me for not cleaning my room.
B1 The boss tends to come down on employees who are consistently late.
B2 The government has promised to come down hard on companies that pollute the environment.
C1 The judge is known to come down heavily on repeat offenders.
C2 The media often comes down harshly on public figures who make controversial statements.
formal The judge will come down on the defendant with a harsh sentence.
informal If you don't clean your room, mom is going to come down on you.
slang The boss really came down on me for being late to work.
figurative The rain started to come down on us as we walked home.
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