bring together
English
editVerb
editbring together (third-person singular simple present brings together, present participle bringing together, simple past and past participle brought together)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see bring, together.
- 2023 February 8, Tony Streeter, “Kirkdale: home to Merseyrail's new '777s'”, in RAIL, number 976, page 36:
- Although third-rail operation in the region dates back more than a century, it was in the 1970s that tunnels under Liverpool's city centre opened to bring together previously disparate routes.
- (idiomatic) To cause people to do something together; to bring about togetherness.
Translations
editother than figuratively or idiomatically
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to cause people to do something together
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