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Charlotte Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Bring/bring on

Can someone please explain to me the difference between bring and bring on?
Which one should I use in this sentence:
Bring (on) the complex problems.

Thank you! Emotion: smile

  

Top answer

Charlotte Can someone please explain to me the difference between bring and bring on? Which one should I use in this sentence: Bring (on) the complex problems. Thank you!

  • Charlotte Can someone please explain to me the difference between bring and bring on?
  • Which one should I use in this sentence: Bring (on) the complex problems.
  • Thank you!
  • 'Bring', by itself, is the standard form used for the literal meaning of 'transport something from one place to this place'.
  • ' In your example, if the teacher, say, is inviting students simply to bring problems to class to be solved, 'bring' is fine.
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3 Answers
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CharlotteCan someone please explain to me the difference between bring and bring on?
Which one should I use in this sentence:
Bring (on) the complex problems.

Thank you!
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Thanks Philip, so do you think the right thing would be to use bring on in the following sentence: "Bring on the complex problems, we will provide the computational power."
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CharlotteThanks Philip, so do you think the right thing would be to use bring on in the following sentence: "Bring on the complex problems, we will provide the computational power."
Absolutely.

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