Bring
UK /["/brɪŋ/","/brɪŋz/","/brɔːt/","/ˈbrɪŋɪŋ/"]/US /["/brɪŋ/","/brɪŋz/","/brɔːt/","/ˈbrɪŋɪŋ/"]/
Definition
to come to a place with somebody/something
In simple words: To carry something to a place.
Examples
- Please bring your books to class tomorrow.
- Can you bring me a glass of water?
- I will bring the dessert for the party.
- He likes to bring his dog to the park.
- They always bring snacks when they visit.
Usage notes
Use 'bring' when you are talking about moving something from one place to another where the speaker is. Avoid using it when the object is not physically moving.
Grammar pattern
bring + object + to + location
Memory hint
Think of a 'ring' — you bring a ring as a gift to someone special.
Collocations
- bring a gift
- bring it back
- bring to mind
Synonyms
- carry
- deliver
- convey
- transport
Antonyms
- take
Common mistakes
- Confused with 'take' — remember 'bring' is to the speaker's location, 'take' is away from it.
- Using 'bring' with uncountable nouns incorrectly, like 'bring water' instead of 'bring a bottle of water.'