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All of the answers are correct.
It is correct to say "Bring it to Larry and me" or "Bring it to Larry or me".
"I didn't bring this" is grammatically correct.
"John is requested to bring pie" is grammatically correct.
No. It will only BRING is correct but this is not a complete sentence. It will only bring what? You need to complete the thought.
Lincoln's ten percent plan was designed to bring the south back into the union quickly.
settle in court put before a jury bring to justice bring before a jury
In Standard English, it is not. The correct past tense of "bring" is "brought". "Brung" may be used in some dialects, however, though
Yes, that is correct. The principal parts of the verb "to bring" are bring (present), brought (past), brought (past participle).
That is the correct spelling of the verb "arraign" (bring before a court or judge).
You would be advised to ask both the airline and the UK customs about this BEFORE you attempt it.ojnoj2: Is this the correct answer, or just your assumption?
"Brought" is the past stem and forms compound forms with the verb "to have". "Bring" is the infinitive stem and forms compounds with the verb "to do". Thus "have brought" is correct, but "have bring" is not. It could be "did bring". Both "have brought" and "did bring" are past forms, but with different senses; the form with have can refer to many occasions or an unspecified occasion, but "did bring" refers to a specific occasion. "I have brought the food to our Hallowe'en party on many occasions, and I think you have brought it once, but I know for sure that she did bring it last year, just like she says."