Similar words: upbringing, bring in, bring into play, springing, ringing, engineering, mudslinging, genetic engineering. Meaning: [brɪŋ] n. the act of delivering or distributing something (as goods or mail).
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121. After announcing the acquisition in June 1994, Harvard encountered rough waters in bringing the deal to harbor.
122. It was Arab feminists who insisted on speaking aloud the oldest truths, bringing upon themselves the most ferocious repressions.
123. In the field, women proved themselves capable ambulance drivers, and many drove trucks bringing up supplies to the troops.
124. The police used their batons indiscriminately, bringing down anyone in their path.
125. Your mother, abandoned by your unknown father, had the job of bringing you up on her own.
126. Justice entailed bringing all relations within the ambit of divine order.
127. The sugar contents have dropped badly with the recent loads bringing our overall average down from 16.2 % to 15.7 %.
128. The bairn started bringing his milk back up all the time when he was just a few days old.
129. Already, the program has won accolades for bringing investment to poor neighborhoods of Knoxville.
130. It came to her aid, bringing her all the strength she needed.
131. Inflation stays at 4 Inflation stayed at four point three percent last month bringing a significant boost to the economy.
132. One weekend in mid-July seven new patients were admitted, bringing the hospital total to twenty-nine.
133. Right now, payroll taxes are bringing in far more each year than the system is paying in benefits.
134. Pam has come down for a day of shopping, bringing along our adopted younger sister Kath.
135. Louise had baked a pie for him and was bringing a new pair of sheets from the airing cupboard.
136. Or what if he gets a toothache or needs an appendectomy or is bringing some incurable tropical disease over here with him?
137. Also, there are clear benefits from bringing proposed actions together in a formal strategic analysis and long-term financial plan.
138. Prepare yourself to feel alienated[sentencedict.com/bringing.html], and think twice before bringing a date.
139. Planners must be aware of the less acceptable aspects of bringing people from too large a catchment area.
140. He asserts that he is: bringing to bear the precision of photography in the illustration of our subject.
141. Music have the magic of bringing people together, and creating unity and consolidation. Dr T.P.Chia
142. If we believe this, I think it makes the challenge of bringing up adopted children an easier task.
143. But she suffered a setback when a bout of glandular fever looked like bringing her season to an abrupt halt.
144. If you have a family, you should have organised suitable long-term accommodation before bringing them with you to Edinburgh.
145. Its new approach of competitive bidding has already galvanized towns and cities into bringing forward imaginative proposals for regeneration.
146. The armed forces are said to have sent an extra 2,000 troops to the border area, bringing the total to 3,500.
147. It occurred to them to offer kids in the neighborhood a bounty for bringing in dogs running loose.
148. In order to encourage the internal generation a ideas, senior management must provide a clear mechanism for bringing ideas to their attention.
149. Then you can come here and see auctions, and people bringing everything from a billy goat to an elephant.
150. Sharing in such a personal faith gives unity to the diversity of human beings, bringing us together with others.
More similar words: upbringing, bring in, bring into play, springing, ringing, engineering, mudslinging, genetic engineering, clinging, singing, longing, coming in, changing, belonging, rooming-in, stinginess, scavenging, challenging, belongings, bring, bring off, bring up, bring out, bring on, bring down, bring about, bring back, bring together, bring forward, bring to a halt.