student asking question

What's "come out of" mean?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

In this context, "come out of/come from" means "result from" or "are caused by." Thus, you can understand "benefits that come out of cooperative living" to mean "benefits that result from cooperative living." Note that for this grammar pattern, "come from" is more commonly used than "come out of." Ex: There are many benefits that come from daily exercise. Ex: Out of all the data that came from this study on diabetes, the most interesting one was about genetic causes.

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