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The phrase "I only bring" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is used to indicate that the speaker brings something and nothing else. It is often used to emphasize that the speaker is not bringing anything else besides the mentioned item. Example: "I only bring a small backpack on my travels. I don't like carrying too much luggage."
Exact(25)
I only bring what I can wash in the sink".
You plead softly: "I only bring greetings from England, sir...".
"I only bring it up because I'm angry," Early said.
I only bring my husband along when I've zeroed in on something.
"I only bring the maps," the composer Colin Towns told me in 2006.
"I only bring them directly from my hometown in Oaxaca and they do not use pesticides there," she said.
Similar(32)
"But I only brought a knee-length dress," I told the woman with the clipboard.
And I only brought three balls in at a time for practice.
"I have been here for 10 days, and I only brought with me enough medicine for one day or two".
"I only brought these jeans," she said, adding that she had recently learned she was to stay in New York well into June.
(The honey is actually the best I've ever tasted. I only brought one pot home assuming it wouldn't taste the same in England, but it did).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com