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  • arrive
    arrive
    verb (used without object)
    to come to a certain point in the course of travel; reach one's destination.
  • arrivé
    arrivé
    noun
    a person who has swiftly gained wealth, status, success, or fame.
Synonyms

arrive

1 American  
[uh-rahyv] / əˈraɪv /

verb (used without object)

arrives, present (3rd person singular) arrived, past participle, past arriving present participle
  1. to come to a certain point in the course of travel; reach one's destination.

    He finally arrived in Rome.

  2. to come to be near or present in time.

    The moment to act has arrived.

  3. to attain a position of success, power, achievement, fame, or the like.

    After years of hard work, she has finally arrived in her field.

  4. Archaic. to happen.

    It arrived that the master had already departed.


verb (used with object)

arrives, present (3rd person singular) arrived, past participle, past arriving present participle
  1. Obsolete. to reach; come to.

verb phrase

  1. arrive at

    1. to come to a place after traveling; reach.

    2. to attain the objective in a course or process.

      to arrive at a conclusion.

arrivé 2 American  
[ar-ee-vey, a-ree-vey] / ˌær iˈveɪ, a riˈveɪ /

noun

arrivés plural
  1. a person who has swiftly gained wealth, status, success, or fame.


arrive British  
/ əˈraɪv /

verb

  1. to come to a certain place during or after a journey; reach a destination

  2. (foll by at) to agree upon; reach

    to arrive at a decision

  3. to occur eventually

    the moment arrived when pretence was useless

  4. informal (of a baby) to be born

  5. informal to attain success or gain recognition

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Inflected Forms

noun

Etymology

Origin of arrive1

First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English a(r)riven, from Old French a(r)river, from Vulgar Latin arrīpāre (unrecorded) “to come to land,” verb derivative of Latin ad rīpam “to the riverbank”; cf. river 1

Origin of arrivé2

First recorded in 1920–25; from French: literally, “arrived,” noun use of past participle of arriver “to arrive”; see arrive

Explanation

To arrive is to come to a destination. When you arrive in Paris, the first thing you should do is go and buy a croissant. The word arrive generally means to come to a physical destination, like a place. Make sure you arrive home on time for dinner! But it can also be less literal. You can arrive at a conclusion or a decision after much thought. You can also use arrive to mean "achieve great success," though for whatever reason, this specific usage tends to be in the past tense. If you serve champagne and caviar at a party, your snobby aunt might comment, "My dear, you’ve arrived!” In this case, arrive means to come to a place of great wealth or success.

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Vocabulary lists containing arrive

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“The main bottleneck is really not ballots that arrive after election day. The bottleneck is ballots arriving before or on election day,” Hasen said.

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 9, 2026

The IPOs arrive amid inflation concerns and higher Treasury yields, with 3-month T-bills yielding 2.7 percentage points more than S&P 500 dividends.

From Barron's • Jun. 9, 2026

But if you were following the band, you’ll remember how it seemed to arrive out of nowhere, at the end of two years of touring, including the 1996 Lollapalooza outing.

From Salon • Jun. 9, 2026

A group of 150 Malawians repatriated from South Africa amid growing worries about xenophobia are due to arrive by road in their home country on Monday, the Malawian authorities have said.

From BBC • Jun. 8, 2026

It takes another day, and another day, another night and another night, until mercifully we arrive.

From "Across So Many Seas" by Ruth Behar

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