bring a claim
1bring — W1S1 [brıŋ] v past tense and past participle brought [bro:t US bro:t] [T] [: Old English; Origin: bringan] 1.) a) to take something or someone with you to the place where you are now, or to the place you are talking about →↑take ▪ Did you bring… …
2claim — ▪ I. claim claim 1 [kleɪm] noun [countable] 1. COMMERCE a request or demand for money, or the amount of money asked for: • The developer made a claim against the owner for extra building costs. • There were very large claims for loss of earnings …
3claim — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 statement saying that sth is true ADJECTIVE ▪ dubious, false, unfounded, unsubstantiated ▪ conflicting ▪ There are conflicting claims about the cause of the fire …
4Bring Me the Horizon — Also known as BMTH Origin Sheffield, England Genres …
5bring */*/*/ — UK [brɪŋ] / US verb [transitive] Word forms bring : present tense I/you/we/they bring he/she/it brings present participle bringing past tense brought UK [brɔːt] / US [brɔt] past participle brought Collocations: If you bring, take, or fetch… …
6bring — verb PHRASAL VERB bring sb up ADVERB ▪ badly, well ▪ children who have been well brought up Bring is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑future, ↑morning, ↑ …
7bring an action against — initiate legal proceedings, file a claim against …
8bring an action against someone — make a claim against someone, sue someone, make a lawsuit against a person …
9bring into court — prosecute, sue, file a claim …
10bring suit — start a lawsuit, claim in court …