bring on

VERB
  1. cause to appear
    bring on the birthday cake
  2. bring onto the market or release
    bring out a book
    produce a movie
    produce a new play
  3. cause to arise
    induce a crisis
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How To Use bring on In A Sentence

  • Severe shock can bring on an attack of acne.
  • Yes, the wave of the future is here my friends, and it's sure to bring on a new era of gaming for us all.
  • Who knows what pressure that may bring on a hapless opponent? Times, Sunday Times
  • The evils we bring on ourselves are the hardest to bear. 
  • Even the hair-shirt option, then, will bring only short-term relief.
  • They need to be able to hire, fire and bring on new resources to respond to carriers like ValuJet.
  • Bring on your ipsilateral translation of the condyle, your girt lines and masting falls! Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » For the love of chemical synthesis
  • The northerly breeze may bring one or two light showers to northern and eastern coastal counties. Times, Sunday Times
  • Act, in a commercial view, they think introductive of monopolies, and tending to bring on them the extensive evils thence arising. Tea Leaves Being a Collection of Letters and Documents relating to the shipment of Tea to the American Colonies in the year 1773, by the East India Tea Company. (With an introduction, notes, and biographical notices of the Boston Tea Party)
  • The evils we bring on ourselves are the hardest to bear. 
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