Advertisement
Advertisement
bring
verb as in transport or accompany
verb as in cause; influence
verb as in command a price
Example Sentences
Either we will sell it to someone interested in buying it, or go into some business scenario where I’m just silently investing in some young talent that wants to bring it forward.
It’ll be brought down to a very low number from right now, from where it’s getting to reach its peak.
You may also be able to bring it to a designated drop-off site or place it in a secure dropbox.
When we brought in the National Guard, everything stopped, the crime was gone meaning the whole thing.
Fall brings cooler temperatures for mountain biking and camping, but summer offers time for tubing, paddleboarding, and jumping into lakes.
Taraji manages to bring an equal measure of truth to the mother in her character.
But news of the classes is spread mainly by word of mouth, and participants bring along their friends and families.
The wives have been traveling for years across the globe to bring attention to the case.
Bring a large pot of water to a boil and season liberally with salt.
Their friends noticed, and asked Sabrine to talk to him to bring him out of his shell a little.
It is the dramatic impulse of childhood endeavouring to bring life into the dulness of the serious hours.
When he gets quite large the boy will get tired of having him for a pet, and perhaps bring him back.
The offspring of the ungodly shall not bring forth many branches, and make a noise as unclean roots upon the top of a rock.
There is cause for alarm when they bring one hundred and ten ships into these seas without any means of resistance on our part.
The blind Samson of labor will seize upon the pillars of society and bring them down in a common destruction.
Advertisement
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse