" He lifted the lever until the full load was borne on his shoulders".
The spores are borne by the wind.
AIDS is a blood-borne illness.
The spider was borne by the wind.
The legal costs were borne by the borrower and not the lender.
The burden of caring for her sick mother was a responsibility she had borne with grace and determination.
The eagle soared through the air, borne upon the wind by his broad wings.
After the storm, a beautiful rainbow appeared in the sky, bringing color and hope to the dreary landscape.
Bore shotgun is the way forward.
The nouns in the sentence are love and step.
The meaning of bourne is the past tense of "to bear". So here is a sentence for you. She had bourne the chaos of her children for twenty years and she was thrilled to be and empty nester now. Ryan had bourne the burnden of carrying in ten loads of wood and he was exhausted.
The verb you want is "fero, ferre, tuli, latum," which means "to bear" both in the physical sense ("carry") and the emotional ("endure"). The problem is that Latin is so highly inflected, it depends on many things: I have borne hardships. = Labores tuli. You have borne hardships. = Labores tulistis. I was borne on wings. = Pennis lata sum. They (male) were borne on wings. = Pennis lati sunt. So, do you have a sentence in mind? :-)