The answer would be bear the cost. The difference between to bear can mean to carry, endure, tolerate, maintain direction or the animal. Bare is an adjective that means expose or naked.
The correct spelling is "bear in mind." "Bear" in this context means to remember or carry. "Bare" means uncovered or naked.
The correct 'bare' to use in the sentence ''toonice to bear'' is actually 'bear,' which means to tolerate or endure.
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.
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, the correct term is bare minimum.
No, the correct phrase is "bear in mind," which means to remember or keep in mind. "Bare" means uncovered or without clothes.
First of all, to correct your spellimg. 'woulod' should read ' would'. Q: Woulod you say bringing skills to bear or bare? A: Would you say bringing skills to bear? 'Bare' refers to nakedness or nudity.
The correct phrase is "bear the burden" and that applies to the phrases built on that phrase as well, such as "bear the burden of proof".
- A bare bear can bear very little because it's bare.
The correct phrase is "bear resemblance." "Bear" in this context means to carry or support, so when we say something "bears resemblance" to something else, we mean it shows similarity or likeness. "Bare resemblance" would imply a lack of resemblance, which is not the intended meaning.
No, "bear" and "bare" are not homophones. "Bear" refers to the animal, while "bare" means uncovered or naked.
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.