to bring out

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ostap77

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I need your advice on usage of the phrasel verb "to bring out". My dictionary provides the following example: a writer who's expected to bring out a new novel next year.
Can I bring out a new CD, a song, a movie or something that is not printed?
 
Yes you can. "Bring out" can mean publish. But it goes beyond that. A movie star can bring out a new perfume. Mercedes Benz can bring out a new D-class model, etc.
 
You can also bring out the best in someone.
 
In the years of the bubonic plague, they used to call, "Bring out your dead!"
 
But that is literal; it is not a phrasal verb.
 
Aren't multi-word verbs with BOTH literal and metaphorical meaning called "phrasal verbs"? That is the way they are usually presented in grammar books.
 
I am not a teacher.

Not as far as I'm concerned.

A phrasal verb is an idiomatic phrase.
 
I need your advice on usage of the phrasel verb "to bring out". My dictionary provides the following example: a writer who's expected to bring out a new novel next year.
Can I bring out a new CD, a song, a movie or something that is not printed?

Public shows or performances are usually debuted-- especially if they are live.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/debuted?r=66

Performances contained in an electronic or digital medium are usually released.

Movies can be debuted or released.

Then, you can release a debut album! :)

Those are the two words associated with "bringing out" a new work in the performing arts.



--lotus
 
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