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Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Vocabulary

Bring In N To N

The education department tries to bring in more sports activities to education.


Could I substitute 'to' with 'on'?

If not, "bring in N to N' is different to 'bring in N on N?

  

Top answer

anonymous Could I substitute 'to' with 'on'? In this context, "bring in" means introduce , and we use "to" with "introduce". So, no we can't use "on" instead of "to".

  • anonymous Could I substitute 'to' with 'on'?
  • In this context, "bring in" means introduce , and we use "to" with "introduce".
  • So, no we can't use "on" instead of "to".
  • anonymous If not, is "bring in N to N' is different from to 'bring in N on N ' ?
  • Can you give us an example of the latter?
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1 Answers
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anonymousCould I substitute 'to' with 'on'?

In this context, "bring in" means introduce, and we use "to" with "introduce". So, no we can't use "on" instead of "to".

anonymousIf not, is "bring in N to N' is different from t

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