1, belt refers to bringing people or things from a certain place or to the place where the speaker is, emphasizing the direction rather than the way.
2. Carrying refers to taking things from one place to another, which does not involve the direction, but only emphasizes the way.
Take means to take someone or something away from the speaker or the place that the speaker thinks, and take it to a certain distance from the speaker, which is opposite to the direction of bring and focuses on the direction rather than the way.
4.fetch refers to going back and forth, which is equivalent to taking, bringing things or taking people back to the starting point.
5, get spoken words, basically synonymous with fetch, casual tone.
Second, the usage is different.
1, bringing, the most basic meaning, is to "take people or things to the place where the speaker or listener is." It is a transitive verb, which can take nouns or pronouns representing people, things or abstract things as objects or double objects. Its indirect object can be derived from the preposition to, but it cannot be used for. When used, it means "bring to someone …". Bring can be used as a causative verb, meaning "to urge and persuade". It is often used as an object with reflexive pronouns, or as a compound object with adjectives, and as a complement with infinitive verbs or prepositional phrases.
2.fetch basically means "take (someone)" and "take (something)", which means to go far away from someone [something], pick it up and go back to the starting point. Extension can refer to sending, attracting, selling (at a certain price), arriving, etc.
Fetch is a transitive verb in explaining "take" and "take". Nouns or pronouns can be used as simple objects or double objects, and their indirect objects can be converted into objects of preposition for.
Fetch can be followed by "price" when it is used as a transitive verb. Fetch is an intransitive verb when interpreted as "sell" and "arrive"
3.get is one of the most widely used verbs in English. It can mean to get something, arrive at a certain place, be in a certain state, or remember, catch, hit, kill, get hurt, get sick, eat, prepare (eat) and pay attention. It can be used as transitive verb, intransitive verb and copula verb.
4.take is one of the verbs with the most meaning and the strongest collocation ability in English. Basically, it means "take, take, take and rob", that is, take things with your hands, accept things, and move people or things to a certain place.
According to the context, it can be flexibly translated into "eat, drink, take (medicine), contain", "receive, carry, buy", "think of ……", "remember, measure", "endure, tolerate", "ride, rent", "get, get" and "get".
5.fetch emphasizes that the purpose is to go to a place and bring back (someone's) things. Bring emphasizes directionality, that is, the movement is in the direction or position of the speaker.
Take, bring and carry can all mean to carry smaller things, and carry can also mean to carry larger and heavier things.
7. Holding, carrying and carrying can refer to people's means of transportation, carrying can also refer to animals or means of transportation such as horses and cars, and can also refer to means of transportation in the form of pipes.
Third, the pronunciation is different.
The English pronunciation of 1 and bringing is [br]; The American pronunciation is [br].
The British pronunciation of 2.take is [te? k]; The American pronunciation is [te? k].
3.fetch is pronounced as [fet? ]; The American pronunciation is [fet? ]。
4. The English pronunciation of 4.get is [ω et]; The American pronunciation is [ω et].
The British pronunciation of 5.carry is ['k? ri]; The American pronunciation is ['k? ri].