The correct verb is to bear weight.
The verb to bear is to carry, to support, to tolerate, to endure.
The verb to bare is to uncover, to expose to view, to disclose.
It is "weight bear," but bear weight is better grammar. (As in weightbearing cast, weightbearing x-rays, etc.)
bears Otherwise, they would be called ball barings instead of ball bearings.
For bear weight or bare weight, the correct usage is bear weight. Bare means naked or uncovered. Bear means to carry, tolerate, endure, and to maintain a direction.
'Bear weight' means 'to carry' something.
'Bare weight' means how much a person weighs with no clothes on.
Bear weight.
weight bearing
None of the above. It is "weight borne".
Bare weight
weight bear
to bear RESEMBLANCE to
It is of course bear not bare
E.g 'I walked across the room in bare feet', or 'the walls were bare'. Bare meaning naked for the first example and emptyfor the second example.
It would depend on whether you were commenting on the children being naked (bare children) or born (bear children).
If using the word as to carry or bring as in "to bear arms" then it is bear. If using the word as uncoveredas in "his arms were bare" than it is bare.
'Bear weight' would mean 'to carry'. 'Bare weight' would mean 'reveal your weight' or 'your weight without clothing'.
- A bare bear can bear very little because it's bare.
No, "bear" and "bare" are not homophones. "Bear" refers to the animal, while "bare" means uncovered or naked.
to bear RESEMBLANCE to
A homonym for bare is bear. These two words sound the same but have different meanings: "bare" means uncovered or naked, while "bear" refers to the large mammal.
It is of course bear not bare
Homonyms for bear could include bare (meaning naked or exposed) and bear (meaning to tolerate or endure).
Bare means naked. Bear means to support.
You would say "bear pain." To "bear" something means to put up with it, to endure it. To "bare" something means to make it naked, unclothed.
It means nothing. The expression is "BEAR down" as in, bring your weight to bear on a problem, and use your strength towards a solution.
It's to "bear fruit." yeah it is the right answer
Bear the load. Bare the load would be to uncover the load...