It is correct to say "Bring it to Larry and me" or "Bring it to Larry or me".
Larry shouted,"look at that!"
Well, there is no difference in terms of the act of "boiling," but there is a grammatical difference. Saying "bring it to the boil" is unnecessary. There is no need for using the definite article "the" for "boil". Merely say or write "bring to boil" or "boil." These are good enough.
That is the correct spelling of "resurrect" (bring back to life).
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Neither Patrick nor Jamal remembered to bring hishomework.
i think the correct way to say that is give Larry and I an opportunity ....
"I didn't bring this" is grammatically correct.
Larry shouted,"look at that!"
"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.
In Standard English, it is not. The correct past tense of "bring" is "brought". "Brung" may be used in some dialects, however, though
The correct verb is has.It's easier to recognize when you identify just the subject and the verb, "Larry has...".
Yes, that is correct. The principal parts of the verb "to bring" are bring (present), brought (past), brought (past participle).
Red, his tie is red and it's the correct answer in kiis club =)
"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."
First off, use correct gramar and hit F4. this will bring you to the correct site.
"I didn't bring this" is a perfectly correct, slightly colloquial English sentence (because of the inclusion of an informal contraction), provided that the context shows what the indefinite pronoun "this" means in this instance.