- A bare bear can bear very little because it's bare.
How did the bear bear being bare naked? He eats his own fur.
Because he was hungry. The bare bear took the pairs of pear-shaped hare hairs to the fair fair to barter for stolen stollen.
Ask yourself, "what is the verb?". Then ask yourself "what are the nouns?" Pare away all the adjectives, adverbs and prepositional phrases and when you see a list, compile them under one label. E.g. "For who would bear the whips and scorns of time, the proud man's contumely, the pangs of despised love, the law's delay, the insolence of office and the spurns that patient merit takes when he himself might his quietus make with a bare bodkin." Compile the list: For who would bear {bad stuff} when he himself might his quietus make with a bare bodkin. Pare the prepositional phrase: For who would bear {bad stuff} when he himself might his quietus make. The structural basis of all sentences is built on verbs and nouns.
a penguin bear
Oh, dude, like, you call it a wet bear. I mean, come on, it's not rocket science. Bears get wet in the rain, just like we do. So yeah, it's a wet bear. Pretty straightforward, right?
You can bear a load.
No, "bear" and "bare" are not homophones. "Bear" refers to the animal, while "bare" means uncovered or naked.
It is of course bear not bare
Bare means naked. Bear means to support.
bare is like the carpet is bare and bear is an animal
Another homophone for "bare" is "bear."
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's to "bear fruit." yeah it is the right answer
Bear the load. Bare the load would be to uncover the load...
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.
The homophone for "bare" is "bear."