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View synonyms forbare

bare

1

[ bair ]

adjective

barer,barest.
  1. without covering or clothing; naked; nude:

    bare legs.

    Synonyms:undressed

  2. without the usual furnishings, contents, etc.:

    bare walls.

    Synonyms:barren,empty,stark,plain

  3. open to view; unconcealed; undisguised:

    his bare dislike of neckties.

  4. unadorned; bald; plain:

    the bare facts.

  5. (of cloth) napless or threadbare.
  6. scarcely or just sufficient; mere:

    the bare necessities of life.

  7. Obsolete.with the head uncovered; bareheaded.


verb (used with object)

bared,baring.
  1. to open to view; reveal or divulge:

    to bare one's arms; to bare damaging new facts.

    Synonyms:expose,uncover

bare

2

[ bair ]

verb

Archaic.
  1. simple past tense ofbear1.

bare

1

/ bɛə /

adjective

  1. unclothed; exposed: used esp of a part of the body
  2. without the natural, conventional, or usual covering or clothing

    a bare tree

  3. lacking appropriate furnishings, etc

    a bare room

  4. unembellished; simple

    the bare facts

  5. prenomialjust sufficient; mere

    he earned the bare minimum

  6. with one's bare hands
    without a weapon or tool
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. trto make bare; uncover; reveal
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

bare

2

/ bɛə /

verb

  1. archaic.
    a past tense ofbear 1
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Derived Forms

  • ˈbareness,noun
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Other Word Forms

  • barishadjective
  • barenessnoun
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Word History and Origins

Origin ofbare1

First recorded before 900;Middle English;Old Englishbær;cognate withOld Frisianber,Dutchbaar,Old Saxon,Old High German,Germanbar,Old Norseberr;akin toArmenianbok“naked,”Lithuanianbãsas,Russianbosóĭ“barefoot”
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Word History and Origins

Origin ofbare1

Old Englishbær; compare Old Norseberr, Old High Germanbarnaked, Old Slavonicbosǔbarefoot
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Synonym Study

Bare, stark, barren share the sense of lack or absence of something that might be expected. Bare, the least powerful in connotation of the three, means lack of expected or usual coverings, furnishings, or embellishments: bare floor, feet, head. Stark implies extreme severity or desolation and resultant bleakness or dreariness: a stark landscape; a stark, emotionless countenance. Barren carries a strong sense of sterility and oppressive dullness: barren fields; a barren relationship. Seemere1.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

After the first doses of gas, the woman kicked a passenger door open with her bare foot and briefly appeared, before closing the door and staying inside the truck.

Ms Ramsden said her son, who has additional needs, had struggled with the bare floorboards.

FromBBC

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride called the figures "alarming, but not surprising", adding that they "lay bare the price the British people are paying for Rachel Reeves' choices".

FromBBC

In a hotly-contested race, teeth were occasionally bared and there was some jostling for position in the closing sprint.

FromBBC

"Though the Assad-era constitutions formally proclaimed political freedoms… our experience of political modernity came in the form of shells falling on our heads, while our bodies were laid bare in detention camps," he tells me.

FromBBC

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Related Words

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Bare Vs. Bear

What’s the difference betweenbare andbear?

Bare can be an adjective that means uncovered (as inbare feet) or empty or without the usual contents (as inbare cabinets orbare walls), or a verb meaning to reveal or open to view (as inbare your secrets). As a verb,bear commonly means to endure something negative (as in I can’t bear to watch) or to carry, hold up, or support (as inThe roof can’t bear that much weight), while as a noun it refers to the big furry animal (likegrizzlybears andpolarbears).

As a verb,bear is often used in the context of holding or carrying things, including in literal, physical ways (as inbear a load orbear weight) and in figurative ones (as inbear a grudge).

Bare is most commonly used as an adjective, usually involving something uncovered or empty.

To remember the difference in spelling, remember thatbears haveears, and they are able tobear a lot of weight because of how big and strong they are, but they are neverbare because they are covered in fur.

Here’s an example ofbare andbear used correctly in a sentence.

Example: Why does the bear never wear shoes? Because he prefers bare feet.

Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of thedifference betweenbare andbear.

Quiz yourself on bare vs. bear!

Shouldbare orbear be used in the following sentence?

He chose to _____ his soul to her by showing her his poetry.

About This Word

What else doesbaremean?

Bare is UK slang forvery orlots of.

Where doesbare come from?

The slangbareoriginates inMulticultural London English in the 1990s and was widely reported on as UK slang in the 2010s in the mainstream presence.

A contributor to its spread is the popular, London-based genre of rap music calledGrime, which features aggressive,hard-hitting beats and lyrics. In their 2016 song “Too Many Man,” for instance, Grime group Boy Better Know sang about the club: “We need some more girls in here…Bare man not enough girls in here.” That track featured the “Godfather of Grime” himself, Wiley, who wrote “bare hype, bare bullshit, bare drama” on his 2015 mixtapeTunnel Vision Volume 1.

In 2013, a school in south London attempted to ban students from using words likebare on campus, believing it hurt their employment chances later in life.

How isbareused in real life?

Bare is used as anintensifier. If you earnbare money, you earn “a lot” of money.

being an estate agent was one of my ideas might actually get into it tbh you earn bare money

— kian (@ky6hh)October 18, 2018

If you arebare hungry, as another example, then you are “extremely” hungry.

If you were in the presence ofbare women, as many who use the word often claim to be, that would be “many girls.”

Thanks to the popularity of Grime music and the diversity of London,bare has spread beyond UK slang into mainstream youth slang. It’s still closely associated with London slang, however.

More examples ofbare:

“School slang ban is bare extra, innit?“
—Felix Allen,The Sun (headline), October, 2013

Note

This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.

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