come out of the woodwork

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From the idea of insects crawling out from inside the woodwork in a house.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Verb[edit]

come out of the woodwork (third-person singular simple present comes out of the woodwork, present participle coming out of the woodwork, simple past came out of the woodwork, past participle come out of the woodwork)

  1. (idiomatic, disapproving) to appear or emerge unexpectedly or inexplicably, frequently in large numbers or quantity.
    He won the lottery last year and he has had old "friends" and distant relatives coming out of the woodwork ever since.
    • 1947 May, Colonel S. Legree, “We Must Get Together”, in Infantry Journal[1], volume 60, number 5, page 26:
      [...] 90-day wonders [...] were kicked around by harassed Regulars who were [...] just too busy to take time to spare the feelings of those strange creatures who came out of the woodwork and wanted the privileges of officers, without being fully prepared to do the work of officers.
    • 1992, Robert P. Newman, chapter 0, in Owen Lattimore and the “Loss” of China[2], page 227:
      Would-be informants came crawling out of the woodwork, drawn to McCarthy as moths to light, each peddling a new version of Lattimore's evil deeds.
    • 2006, John Marsden, Circle of Flight: The Ellie Chronicles: 3, unnumbered page:
      And suddenly they came out of the woodwork. I don't actually know what that expression means. What come out of the woodwork? Cockroaches maybe. Mice?
    • 2012, Enzo Centofanti, chapter 0, in Out of Africa and into America: The Odyssey of Italians in East Africa[3], page 136:
      With the fall of the fascist regime, Italy was virtually overrun by several political parties who came out of the woodwork to fill in the vacuum.

Usage notes[edit]

The forms bring out of the woodwork and pull out of the woodwork are sometimes used. To blend into the woodwork is antonymous.

Related terms[edit]

See also[edit]