| a children's mummer's parade, as on the Fourth of July, with prizes for the best costumes. |
| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
bring (brɪŋ) ![]() | |
| —vb , brings, bringing, brought | |
| 1. | to carry, convey, or take (something or someone) to a designated place or person: bring that book to me; will you bring Jessica to Tom's party? |
| 2. | to cause to happen or occur to (oneself or another): to bring disrespect on oneself |
| 3. | to cause to happen as a consequence: responsibility brings maturity |
| 4. | to cause to come to mind: it brought back memories |
| 5. | to cause to be in a certain state, position, etc: the punch brought him to his knees |
| 6. | to force, persuade, or make (oneself): I couldn't bring myself to do it |
| 7. | to sell for; fetch: the painting brought 20 pounds |
| 8. | law |
| a. to institute (proceedings, charges, etc) | |
| b. to put (evidence, etc) before a tribunal | |
| 9. | bring forth to give birth to |
| 10. | bring home to |
| a. to convince of: his account brought home to us the gravity of the situation | |
| b. to place the blame on | |
| 11. | bring to bear See bear |
| [Old English bringan; related to Gothic briggan, Old High German bringan] | |
| 'bringer | |
| —n | |
| bring out | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | to produce or publish or have published: when are you bringing out a new dictionary? |
| 2. | to expose, reveal, or cause to be seen: she brought out the best in me |
| 3. | to encourage (a shy person) to be less reserved (often in the phrase bring (someone) out of himselforherself) |
| 4. | (Brit) (of a trade union, provocative action by management, misunderstanding, etc) to cause (workers) to strike |
| 5. | ( |
| 6. | (Brit) to introduce (a girl) formally into society as a debutante |
bring (so) definition
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bring (sth) definition
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bring out
Expose or reveal; make conspicuous. For example, His book brought out some new facts about the war, or Her photographs bring out the play of light on her subjects. [Late 1500s]
Nurture or develop a quality, as in A gifted teacher brings out the best in pupils. [c. 1700]
Present to the public. For example, The publisher decided to bring out this dictionary in a single volume, or Debutantes traditionally are brought out at a ball. [c. 1800]