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Kevin
Pull off and/or bring off?
Hi,
I found that "pull off" and "bring off" both mean to succeed in doing something despite difficulties but what is more commonly used? Are there nuances?
Examples:
He pulled it off.
He brought it off.
11 nov 2016 14:25
Risposte · 3
2
I can't speak for the UK but in the US, I'm not sure I have ever heard anyone use the term "to bring off". It exists, and there appear to be nuances, but I've actually never heard it used.
Having said that, I did search a bit online and the difference between them seems to me the implicit difficulty. To pull something off tends to defy a greater expectation of failure. Where "to bring off" might simply mean to accomplish something, "to pull off" seems to mean "did you surprise everyone with your accomplishment".
11 novembre 2016
1
He pulled it off = He succeeded
11 novembre 2016
1
I searched "bring off" and "brought off" on fraze.it and I couldn't see any examples of the verb with your meaning. It does sound familiar, it is in the dictionary [http://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/bring-off] and I'm sure I've seen it a few times, but "pull off" is more common in my experience.
11 novembre 2016
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Kevin
Competenze linguistiche
Inglese, Filippino (tagalog), Francese, Gaelico (irlandese), Norvegese
Lingua di apprendimento
Inglese, Filippino (tagalog), Gaelico (irlandese), Norvegese
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