bring to bear

VERB
  1. bring into operation or effect
    The new members brought to bear new concerns to the U.N.
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How To Use bring to bear In A Sentence

  • If we are to build on this experience we must bring to bear a spirit of constructive engagement, for this will ultimately be far more productive than boycotts or other forms of negativism, regardless of the justifications.
  • No closed-source developer can match the pool of talent the Linux community can bring to bear on a problem.
  • However, in choosing to use Jython, you are able to bring to bear the entire Python language and runtime against your problem of choosing which tests to execute.
  • Ugh. Singly it's not the worst of qualities a lawyerly type and casuist might bring to bear, but given the use it's put to it's positively insufferable. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • The rationale was to wave you off if fuzzy MBA/technology buzzwords is all you can bring to bear. Online Content Bundling, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • When the muscularity that should bring to bear on to go up in mattess that is to say, mattess should drop more and produce more supportive power to human body, vice versa.
  • Critics point out the nit-picking thoroughness which legal authorities in the Republic so often bring to bear on extradition requests.
  • There's no way to pick that passage apart except to bring to bear the same kind of exegeses on language and form that one aims at the poems of Gerald Manley Hopkins. I can't go on, I'll go on
  • When the muscularity that tall flexibility should bring to bear on to go up in mattess namely, mattess should drop more and produce more supportive power to human body, vice versa.
  • a philanthropical institution, or an educational enterprise, or a network of agencies and "instrumentalities" to bring to bear on society at large certain ameliorating influences or benignant reforms. The Old Roman World, : the Grandeur and Failure of Its Civilization.
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