phrasal verb 'bring in'
Phrasal verbMain meaning
bring in
[brɪŋ ɪn]
to introduce or earn (something)

Other meanings

  • to involve someone in a process or activity
  • to arrest or take someone to the police station
  • to introduce a law or rule
  • to earn money or profit

Example Sentences Using the Phrasal Verb "bring in"

  • The new marketing campaign brought in a lot of customers.
  • We need to bring in an expert to solve this problem.
  • The police brought him in for questioning.
  • The government plans to bring in new regulations.
  • The shop brought in over $10,000 last week.

Features of Using "bring in"

Separability:Optionally separable Transitivity:Transitive Level:B1 Particle:in

The phrasal verb “bring in” has many meanings depending on the context: business, law, finance, management. It is very often used in official and business speech.

Other phrasal verbs with the verb bring

bringup

bring up

to mention a topic in conversation
bring-out

bring out

to make something noticeable or visible
domino

bring about

to cause something to happen
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bring back

return something or someone to its earlier place or state
bring-down

bring down

to reduce something
bring-forward

bring forward

to move something to an earlier time