To reduce to a position of subservience or submission. bring to terms To force (another) to agree. bring up the rear To be the last in a line or sequence. [Middle Englishbringen, from Old Englishbringan; seebher-inIndo-European roots.] ...
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To reduce to a position of subservience or submission. bring to terms To force (another) to agree. bring up the rear To be the last in a line or sequence. [Middle Englishbringen, from Old Englishbringan; seebher-inIndo-European roots.] ...
To reduce to a position of subservience or submission. bring to terms To force (another) to agree. bring up the rear To be the last in a line or sequence. [Middle Englishbringen, from Old Englishbringan; seebher-inIndo-European roots.] ...
bring on, induce - cause to arise; "induce a crisis" bring off, carry off, manage, negociate, pull off - be successful; achieve a goal; "She succeeded in persuading us all"; "I managed to carry the box upstairs"; "She pulled it off, even though we never thought her capable of it...
To reduce to a position of subservience or submission. bring to terms To force (another) to agree. bring up the rear To be the last in a line or sequence. [Middle Englishbringen, from Old Englishbringan; seebher-inIndo-European roots.] ...
bring on, induce - cause to arise; "induce a crisis" bring off, carry off, manage, negociate, pull off - be successful; achieve a goal; "She succeeded in persuading us all"; "I managed to carry the box upstairs"; "She pulled it off, even though we never thought her capable of it...
bring on, induce - cause to arise; "induce a crisis" bring off, carry off, manage, negociate, pull off - be successful; achieve a goal; "She succeeded in persuading us all"; "I managed to carry the box upstairs"; "She pulled it off, even though we never thought her capable of it...
Verb1.bring off- be successful; achieve a goal; "She succeeded in persuading us all"; "I managed to carry the box upstairs"; "She pulled it off, even though we never thought her capable of it"; "The pianist negociated the difficult runs" ...
To reduce to a position of subservience or submission. bring to terms To force (another) to agree. bring up the rear To be the last in a line or sequence. [Middle Englishbringen, from Old Englishbringan; seebher-inIndo-European roots.] ...