verb, bore or (Archaic
) bare; borne or born; bear⋅ing.| 1. | to hold up; support: to bear the weight of the roof. |
| 2. | to hold or remain firm under (a load): The roof will not bear the strain of his weight. |
| 3. | to bring forth (young); give birth to: to bear a child. |
| 4. | to produce by natural growth: a tree that bears fruit. |
| 5. | to hold up under; be capable of: His claim doesn't bear close examination. |
| 6. | to press or push against: The crowd was borne back by the police. |
| 7. | to hold or carry (oneself, one's body, one's head, etc.): to bear oneself erectly. |
| 8. | to conduct (oneself): to bear oneself bravely. |
| 9. | to suffer; endure; undergo: to bear the blame. |
| 10. | to sustain without yielding or suffering injury; tolerate (usually used in negative constructions, unless qualified): I can't bear your nagging. I can hardly bear to see her suffering so. |
| 11. | to be fit for or worthy of: It doesn't bear repeating. |
| 12. | to carry; bring: to bear gifts. |
| 13. | to carry in the mind or heart: to bear love; to bear malice. |
| 14. | to transmit or spread (gossip, tales, etc.). |
| 15. | to render; afford; give: to bear witness; to bear testimony. |
| 16. | to lead; guide; take: They bore him home. |
| 17. | to have and be entitled to: to bear title. |
| 18. | to exhibit; show: to bear a resemblance. |
| 19. | to accept or have, as an obligation: to bear responsibility; to bear the cost. |
| 20. | to stand in (a relation or ratio); have or show correlatively: the relation that price bears to profit. |
| 21. | to possess, as a quality or characteristic; have in or on: to bear traces; to bear an inscription. |
| 22. | to have and use; exercise: to bear authority; to bear sway. |
| 23. | to tend in a course or direction; move; go: to bear west; to bear left at the fork in the road. |
| 24. | to be located or situated: The lighthouse bears due north. |
| 25. | to bring forth young or fruit: Next year the tree will bear. |
| 26. | bear down,
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| 27. | bear down on or upon,
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| 28. | bear off,
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| 29. | bear on or upon, to affect, relate to, or have connection with; be relevant to: This information may bear on the case. |
| 30. | bear out, to substantiate; confirm: The facts bear me out. |
| 31. | bear up, to endure; face hardship bravely: It is inspiring to see them bearing up so well. |
| 32. | bear with, to be patient or forbearing with: Please bear with me until I finish the story. |
| 33. | bring to bear, to concentrate on with a specific purpose: Pressure was brought to bear on those with overdue accounts. |

bear
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bear
bear with
Put up with, make allowance for, as in He'll just have to bear with them until they decide. Nicholas Udall used this term in Ralph Roister Doister (c. 1553): "The heart of a man should more honour win by bearing with a woman." It may also be used as an imperative, as in Bear with me
I'm getting to the point.