The present tense of "bring" is "brings." For example, "She brings the book to class every day."
The word bring is the simple present tense of the verb to bring (brings, bringing, brought).
bring/brings
The present participle of "bring" is "bringing."
The present form of "bring" is "bring," the past form is "brought," and the future form is "will bring."
The present perfect tense of "bring" is "have brought."
The word bring is the simple present tense of the verb to bring (brings, bringing, brought).
bring/brings
The present participle of "bring" is "bringing."
The present form of "bring" is "bring," the past form is "brought," and the future form is "will bring."
The present perfect tense of "bring" is "have brought."
Present participle - bringing Simple past - brought Past participle - brought
I will bring
"To bring" is an English equivalent of the Italian word portare.Specifically, the Italian word is a verb that means "bring, carry, take, wear." It is the present form of the infinitive. The pronunciation is "pohr-TAH-reh."
Portare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to bring."Specifically, the Italian word is a verb. It is the present form of the infinitive. The pronunciation is "pohr-TAH-reh.
It's from the verb 'llevar' = to bring, carry and it's the (informal) second personal singular, present active indicative, form = 'you carry, bring'
I, you, we, they bring. He, she, it brings.
The verb to bring is an irregular verb whose present tense form is bring. The past and past participle tense forms are the same word â??brought." Irregular verbs are verbs that do not use an -ed in the past tense form.