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Bring to do Meaning in English

expression

ˈbɹɪŋ/ /ˈtu/, /tə/, /tɪ/ /ˈdu
BRING tuh DOO
bɹˈɪŋ/ /tˈuː/ /dʉː
bring-TOO-DOO

释义

To cause someone to do something, usually by persuading, motivating, or forcing them. Used to talk about making someone take an action they might not do on their own.

用法与细微差别

This is a formal/neutral expression mainly seen in writing or official speech, not casual conversation. It’s followed by an object (who) and a verb in base form (what to do): 'bring someone to understand'. Common with abstract actions or changes in attitude. Often interchangeable with 'persuade to', 'lead to', or 'cause (someone) to'.

例句

His words brought her to cry.

basic

Nothing could bring him to apologize.

basic

The teacher tried to bring the students to understand the lesson.

basic

How did you finally bring him to admit the truth?

natural

It took years to bring the company to change its policy.

natural

Her patience finally brought him to forgive her.

natural