Bring me home vs. Take me home - WordReference Forums I know there are other threads on the "take vs bring" subject; unless I'm mistaken none of them specifically answers this question but I gathered that these two expressions are pretty much interchangeable For what it's worth, googling "Take me home" I have got about 20 times as many hits as
bring my lunch brought my lunch - WordReference Forums I bring= habit, I brought= past event I bring my lunch every day or every Tuesday I brought my lunch today or last Wednesday For the question what do you have for lunch? Usually it means today, I would answer a sandwich
Breadwinner To Bring Home The Bacon - WordReference Forums These are very common and very well-understood English expressions They signify which household member is the primary source of income for the family, most likely the father Specifically, the breadwinner is the one who brings home the most money Bringing home the bacon means to fulfill the
Bring it home - WordReference Forums "Bring it home" often refers figuratively to taking a general idea and applying it practically, or taking a general concept and making it more concrete, employing it to analyze a more specific situation Here, I would guess, the idiom "bring it home" is used in a new way, trying to communicate the extra idea of taking the lessons of drug-prevention and literally applying it in our homes It's
Bring it on home - WordReference Forums Hi all :) Could you please help me translating "Yes! Bring it on home!" Background: someone achieved a goal and is congratulated by somebody else Thanks in advance!
bring home the bacon - WordReference Forums Bring home the bacon is an idiom that means to earn a living, or to be successful at achieving something It derives from the notion of putting food on the table
bring it on home - WordReference Forums Anybody knows the meaning of this sentence: "bring it on home to me" It's a Sam Cooke's song and i don't know the context I found it while having a look at "bring it on" in forums Thanks
brought it home to me - WordReference Forums Yes, it does If some fact or experience brings it (or something) home to somebody, "it" is made clear, real or apparent to that person M-W has this definition of the phrase (it no longer seems to be in the WR English dictionary): — bring home : to make unmistakably clear
A beat girl - WordReference Forums Nick and Pres have an ongoing context to see who can bring a girl home, using an opening line that relates to financial matters Nick apparently won on this occasion, and is described as high on cocaine