bear
suomi-englanti sanakirjabear englannista suomeksi
sisältää
tuottaa
omata, olla
kestää, kantaa, kuljettaa, kannattaa, vastata, ottaa harteille
synnyttää
sietää
pörssikeinottelija
ottaa kannettavakseen, ottaa maksettavakseen
käyttäytyä, esiintyä
karhu
kantaa hedelmää
Substantiivi
bear englanniksi
(senseid) A large, generally omnivorous mammal (a few species are purely carnivorous or herbivorous), related to the dog and raccoon, having shaggy hair, a very small tail, and flat feet; a member of the family (taxfmt).
The meat of this animal.
(ux)
A rough, unmannerly, uncouth person. (defdate)
(quote-text)
An investor who sells commodities, securities, or futures in anticipation of a fall in prices. (defdate)
(ant)
{{quote-book|en|year=1821|author=Bank of England|title=The Bank - The Stock Exchange - The Bankers ...|page=64
A state policeman (qualifier). (defdate)
(quote-song)|album=Black Bear Road|url=|artist=C. W. McCall|passage=By the time we got into Tulsa TownWe had eighty-five trucks in allBut there's a roadblock up on the cloverleafAnd them bears was wall-to-wall.Yeah, them smokies is thick as bugs on a bumperThey even had a bear in the air.I says, "Callin' all trucks, this here's the Duck.We about to go a-huntin' bear."
{{quote-book|en|year=1976|month=June|title=CB Magazine|publisher=Communications Publication Corporation|location=Oklahoma City|section=June 40/3
{{quote-text|en|year=2015|author=Matt Cashion|title=Last Words of the Holy Ghost|page=85
A large, hairy man, especially one who is homosexual. (defdate)(cite-web)
(quote-journal)
{{quote-journal|en|author=Richard Goldstein|title=Why I'm Not a Bear|journal=The Advocate|issue=913|date=27 April 2004|page=72
{{quote-text|en|year=2006|author=Simon LeVay; Sharon McBride Valente|title=Human sexuality
(quote-book)
A block covered with coarse matting, used to scour the deck.
The fifteenth Lenormand card.
(co)
Characterized by declining prices in securities markets or by belief that the prices will fall.
(collocation)
(RQ:Shakespeare Tempest)
To carry (weapons, flags or symbols of rank, office, etc.) upon one's person, especially visibly; to be equipped with (weapons, etc.).
To wear (garments, pieces of jewellery, etc.).
To have or display (a mark or other feature).
(RQ:Darwin Origin of Species) male stag-beetles often bear wounds from the huge mandibles of other males.
To display (a particular heraldic device) on a shield or coat of arms; to be entitled to wear or use (a heraldic device) as a coat of arms. (defdate)
To present or exhibit (a particular outward appearance); to have (a certain look). (defdate)
{{quote-journal|en|year=1930|journal=Essex Chronicle|section=18 April 9/5
To have (a name, title, or designation). (defdate)
{{quote-book|en|year=2005|translator=Lesley Brown|author=Plato|title=Sophist|page=234b
{{quote-text|en|year=2013|author=D. Goldberg|title=Universe in Rearview Mirror|section=iii. 99
To possess or enjoy (recognition, renown, a reputation, etc.); to have (a particular price, value, or worth). (defdate)
To have (interest or a specified rate of interest) stipulated in its terms. (defdate)
To have (an appendage, organ, etc.) as part of the body; to have (an appendage).
To carry or hold in the mind; to experience, entertain, harbour (an idea, feeling, or emotion).
(RQ:Shakespeare Merchant of Venice)
To feel and show (respect, reverence, loyalty, etc.) to, towards, or unto a person or thing.
To possess inherently (a quality, attribute, power, or capacity); to have and display as an essential characteristic.
To have (a relation, correspondence, etc.) to something else. (defdate)
To give (written or oral testimony or evidence); (figurative) to provide or constitute (evidence or proof), give witness.
To have (a certain meaning, intent, or effect).
(RQ:Hawthorne Scarlet Letter)
To behave or conduct (oneself).
(RQ:Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost)
(RQ:Shakespeare Measure)
To possess and use, to exercise (power or influence); to hold (an office, rank, or position).
(RQ:KJV)
To carry a burden or burdens. (defdate)
To take or bring (a person) with oneself; to conduct. (defdate)
(RQ:Shakespeare Comedy of Errors)
To support, sustain, or endure.
(senseid) To endure or withstand (hardship, scrutiny, etc.); to tolerate; to be patient (with).
(syn)
{{quote-book|en|year=1700|author=John Dryden|chapter=Meleager and Atalanta|title=The poetical works|volume=4|publisher=William Pickering|year_published=1852|pageurl=https://books.google.de/books?id=iXILAAAAYAAJ&dq=I%20cannot%2C%20cannot%20bear%20dryden&hl=de&pg=PA169v=onepage&q&f=false|page=169
(RQ:Homer Pope Iliad)
(RQ:Tennyson In Memoriam)
(quote-song)|authorlabel=no|title=Behind My Eyes|album=Solla|year=2024|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kE7xXjpONA|text=There's this fear deep inside of me / Like there's something I cannot see / And it's coming after me / It's hard to bear
To sustain, or be answerable for (blame, expense, responsibility, etc.).
{{quote-text|en|year=1753|author=John Dryden|title=The Spanish Friar: or, the Double Discovery, Tonson and Draper, p. 64|url=https://books.google.de/books?id=SRRgAAAAcAAJ&dq=What%20have%20you%20under%20your%20arm%3F%20Somewhat%20that%20will%20bear%20your%20charges%20in%20your%20pilgrimage%3F&hl=de&pg=PA64v=onepage&q&f=false
To admit or be capable of (a meaning); to suffer or sustain without violence, injury, or change.
{{quote-text|en|year=1724|publisher=Jonathan Swift|title=Drapier's Letters
(quote-journal) a possible connection at least bears careful study.
To support, keep up, or maintain.
To afford, to be something to someone, to supply with something. (rfex)
1732–4, Alexander Pope, ''An Essay on Man'', Longmans, Green & Co, 1879, p. 10:
- (..) admitted to that equal sky, / His faithful dog shall bear him company.
To carry on, or maintain; to have. (rfex)
{{quote-text|en|year=1693|author=John Locke|title=Some Thoughts Concerning Education|section=§ 98
To push, thrust, press.
(RQ:Spectator)
To take effect; to have influence or force; to be relevant.
Of a weapon, to be aimed at an enemy or other target.
2012, Ronald D. Utt, ''Ships of Oak, Guns of Iron''
- ''Constitution's'' gun crews crossed the deck to the already loaded larboard guns as Bainbridge wore the ship around on a larboard tack and recrossed his path in a rare double raking action to bring her guns to bear again on ''Java's'' damaged stern.
To produce, yield, give birth to.
(senseid) To birth to (someone or something) (qualifier).
{{quote-av
{{quote-text|en|year=1688|author=John Dryden|title=Britannia Rediviva
To be, or head, in a specific direction or azimuth (from somewhere).
(RQ:Bacon Essayes)
April 5, 1549, (w), ''The Fifth Sermon Preached Before King Edward'' (probably not in original spelling)
- She was (..) found not guilty, through bearing of friends and bribing of the judge.
(alternative spelling of).
1800, Tuke, ''Agric.'', 119:
- There are several plots of those species of barley called big, which is six-rowed barley; or bear, which is four-rowed, cultivated.
{{quote-text|en|year=1818|location=Marshall|title=Reports Agric.|section=I. 191
{{quote-text|en|year=1895|location=Dixon|title=Whittingham Vale|section=130
{{quote-text|en|year=1908|title=Burns Chronicle and Club Directory|page=151
1802-1816, ''Papers on Sutherland Estate Management'', published in 1972, Scottish History Society, ''Publications'':
- Your Horses are Getting Pease Straw, and looking very well. The 2 Stacks of Bear formerly mentioned as Put in by Mr Bookless is not fully dressed as yet so that I cannot say at present what Quantity they may Produce .
{{quote-text|en|year=1742|author=William Ellis|title=The London and Country Brewer ... Fourth Edition|page=36
{{quote-text|en|year=1850|author=Samuel Tymms|title=Wills and Inventories from the Registers of the Commissary of Bury St. Edmunds and the Archdeacon of Sudbury|page=116
{{quote-text|en|year=1858|title=Journal of the Statistical Society of London|page=409
1905, Emily Wilder Leavitt, ''Palmer Groups: John Melvin of Charlestown and Concord, Mass. and His Descendants ; Gathered and Arranged for Mr. Lowell Mason Palmer of New York'', page 24:
- I give to my Grand Child Lidea Carpenter the Coverlid that her mother spun and my pillow bear and a pint Cup & my great Pott that belongs to the Pott and Trammels.
{{quote-text|en|year=1941|author=Minnie Hite Moody|title=Long Meadows|page=71
(inflection of)
(topics) bear
(uxi)