Sentences with bear
bear
B b - Her work won't bear scrutiny
- His story does not bear scrutiny
- The bears outnumbered the bulls on Wall Street today.
- 06 Aug 2009, From bear to bull – the cyclical upswing in shares.
- To bear a grudge
- He still bears the scars
- A Colorado grandmother has quite a story to tell after fighting off a momma bear that got into her bedroom.
- SYNONYMY NOTE: bear1 implies a putting up with something that distresses, annoys, pains, etc., without suggesting the way in which one sustains the imposition; , suffer suggests passive acceptance of or resignation to that which is painful or unpleasant; , endure implies a holding up against prolonged pain, distress, etc. and stresses stamina or patience; , tolerate and the more informal , stand both imply self-imposed restraint of one's opposition to what is offensive or repugnant; , brook2, a literary word, is usually used in the negative, suggesting determined refusal to put up with what is distasteful
- To bear gossip
- She bore her head high
- His account bears no relation to the facts
- The way bears east
- A bear market
- To bear a secret
- The letter bore his signature
- Fruit-bearing trees, coal-bearing strata
- To bear the cost
- She couldn't bear him
- She can't bear him
- His actions bear watching
- To bear a grudge
- The crowd bore us along
- To bear witness
- The tree bears well
- The lighthouse bears due east
- Artillery deployed to bear on the fort
- bear right at the corner
- His story bears on the crime
- Grief bears heavily on her
- Checking these computer files is a real bear
- To bear fruit
- A bear believes the market will trend downward.The bears expect the market to decline.A bear is a person who sells shares of stock when they expect the price to drop, hoping to make a profit by buying the shares again after a short time.
- A bear market
- They bore the oblong hardwood box into the kitchen and put it on the table. [VERB noun adverb/preposition]
- ...the constitutional right to bear arms. [VERB noun]
- The ice was not thick enough to bear the weight of marching men. [VERB noun]
- The houses bear the marks of bullet holes. [VERB noun]
- They will have to bear the misery of living in constant fear of war. [VERB noun]
- I can't bear people who make judgements and label me. [VERB noun/verb-ing]
- Patients should not have to bear the costs of their own treatment. [VERB noun]
- If a woman makes a decision to have a child alone, she should bear that responsibility alone. [VERB noun]
- Their daily menus bore no resemblance whatsoever to what they were actually fed. [VERB noun]
- As the plants grow and start to bear fruit they will need a lot of water. [VERB noun]
- The eight-year bond will bear annual interest of 10.5%. [VERB noun]
- Emma bore a son called Karl. [VERB noun]
- She bore no ill will. If people didn't like her, too bad. [VERB noun]
- There was elegance and simple dignity in the way he bore himself. [V pron-refl adv/prep]
- Go left onto the A107 and bear left into Seven Sisters Road. [VERB adverb]
- To bear gifts
- To bear an expense
- To bear children
- The shield bore a red cross.
- I would never move to Texas—I can't bear heat. Please bear with me as I try to find the book you need.
- The jury could see he was bearing false witness.
- The great bear market starting in 1929 scared a whole generation of investors.
- In Troy she becomes Paris’ wife, bearing him several children, all of whom die in infancy.
- The harbour bears north by northeast. By my readings, we're bearing due south, so we should turn about ten degrees east. Great Falls bears north of Bozeman.
- To bring matters to bear
- How does this bear on the question?
- To bear west; to bear left at the fork in the road.
- The right to bear arms
- This stone bears most of the weight.
- To bear a railroad stockto bear the market
- bear market.
- A bear for physics.
- Keep away from the boss—he's loaded for bear today.
- Next year the tree will bear.
- The lighthouse bears due north.