bear.
homonym has a diffrent diffintion than synomyn
No, "bear" and "bare" are not homophones. "Bear" refers to the animal, while "bare" means uncovered or naked.
Another homophone for "bare" is "bear."
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.
The homonym for bear is bare. I ran away from a bear with bare feet.
bare is like the carpet is bare and bear is an animal
The bear used his bare feet to walk .
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.
The word is "bear" (to have, incorporate, or exhibit).
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.
Bear, if you're talking about a sentence like "I bear you no harm." Bare means naked or blank. Bear means an omnivorous mammal or to posses and use.
Bear the load. Bare the load would be to uncover the load...
It would depend on whether you were commenting on the children being naked (bare children) or born (bear children).
BEAR means to keep or to carry. BARE means naked, uncover. You would bear in mind, you would bear arms, you would bare your shoulders to the sun, and wood with no paint or varnish is bare wood. Not to be confused with where Pooh lives- in the Bear woods. :}
No, they would be 'bare' - bear is an animal
You can bear a load.
You would say bear to the right when giving directions.