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 cat had an itch and scratched its back completely bare.Female models can be expected to bare a lot of skin.We had reduced our water use to the bare minimum.(*the animal, the verb for carrying, and what fruit trees do are all "bear")
You'd use "bear us out", not "bare us out". To "bear" someone is to carry them, therefore "bear us out" is akin to "carry us out". "Bare" refers to being plain or uncovered.
the polar bear will be extinct soonDinosaurs that once roamed the earth are now extinct.
She was bare. The desert had no plants at all, not even cacti; it was completely bare. I swept off the little paper scraps with my hand, leaving the paper blank and bare. the dog bared its teeth I've barely started! GAH now the word "bare" sounds completely alien and wierd!!!! he took the hot pan with his bare hands.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
The correct 'bare' to use in the sentence ''toonice to bear'' is actually 'bear,' which means to tolerate or endure.
The bear used his bare feet to walk .
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.
The word "bear" is an animal. The word "bare" means without clothes or to uncover. You would use bare if you were referring to someone without a shirt.
she walked bare foot outside
There is no need to capitalise the word 'koala' in a sentence. Nor do you use the word 'bear', as koalas are not bears.
The cat had an itch and scratched its back completely bare.Female models can be expected to bare a lot of skin.We had reduced our water use to the bare minimum.(*the animal, the verb for carrying, and what fruit trees do are all "bear")
To touch a sterile field with bare hands would contaminate it.
"Bear" has at least two meanings. It can refer to an animal like a polar bear or black bear, or it can mean to carry or put up with, usually in the sense of having difficulty (It was difficult for the firefighter to bear the thought of so much destruction.) Bare means to uncover or be uncovered.
"Bare" means uncovered or exposed, while "bear" can be a verb meaning to carry or support or a noun referring to the large mammal. Use "bare" when describing something that is naked or minimal, and "bear" when talking about carrying a burden or referring to the animal.
You'd use "bear us out", not "bare us out". To "bear" someone is to carry them, therefore "bear us out" is akin to "carry us out". "Bare" refers to being plain or uncovered.
he went racing with his bare foot.