bring out — release a product
phrasal verbB1IELTS 5+neutralcommon
to produce something new and make it available for people to buy or use.
Say it like a native
Textbook The company will release a new model later this year.
Native They're bringing out a new model this year.
'Bring out' is the everyday, conversational verb for launching a product; 'release' is fine but flatter for goods.
Pattern: bring out + noun
In use
- Apple is planning to bring out a new smartphone next month.work
- If I owned a business, I would try to bring out innovative products every year to attract more customers.IELTS speaking
Common mistake
✗ Apple brought out with a new phone.
✓ Apple brought out a new phone.
'Bring out' takes the object directly — no 'with'.
Common collocations
bring out + product— a new model, an album, a book, a range
Don't confuse it
'Bring out' here is about making something available, not about physically removing something.
Related
- bring out (make a quality noticeable) — Another meaning of 'bring out' is 'make a quality noticeable'; compare the examples to keep the meanings separate.