BEAR vs ASSUME: NOUN
- Massive plantigrade carnivorous or omnivorous mammals with long shaggy coats and strong claws
- Any of various usually omnivorous mammals of the family Ursidae that have a shaggy coat and a short tail and walk with the entire lower surface of the foot touching the ground.
- Any of various other animals, such as the koala, that resemble a true bear.
- A large, clumsy, or ill-mannered person.
- One, such as an investor, that sells securities or commodities in expectation of falling prices.
- A pessimist, especially regarding business conditions.
- Something that is difficult or unpleasant.
- A highway patrol officer.
- A hairy, stocky gay man.
- Barley: a word now used chiefly in the north of England and in Scotland for the common four-rowed barley, Hordeum vulgare. The six-rowed kind, H. hexastichon, is called big.
- A pillow-case: usually in composition, pillow-bear.
- The panda, Ælurus fulgens, otherwise called bear-cat.
- An investor with a pessimistic market outlook; an investor who expects prices to fall and so sells now in order to buy later at a lower price
- N/A
BEAR vs ASSUME: ADJECTIVE
- Characterized by falling prices.
- N/A
BEAR vs ASSUME: VERB
- Take on as one's own the expenses or debts of another person
- Have rightfully; of rights, titles, and offices
- Have
- Move while holding up or supporting
- Bring forth, The apple tree bore delicious apples this year bringforththeappletreeboredeli
- Contain or hold; have within
- Have on one's person
- Be pregnant with
- Bring in
- Behave in a certain manner
- Give birth (to a newborn)
- Put up with something or somebody unpleasant
- Support or hold in a certain manner
- Take up someone's soul into heaven
- To adopt an idea or cause.
- To take on a position, duty or form.
- To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof.
- Seize and take control without authority and possibly with force; take as one's right or possession
- Take on titles, offices, duties, responsibilities
- Take on a certain form, attribute, or aspect
- Put clothing on one's body
- Take on as one's own the expenses or debts of another person
- Make a pretence of
- Occupy or take on
- Christianity, obsolete; take up someone's soul into heaven
- Take to be the case or to be true; accept without verification or proof
BEAR vs ASSUME: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To carry (something) on one's person from one place to another.
- To move from one place to another while containing or supporting (something); convey or transport: : carry.
- To cause to move by or with steady pressure; push.
- To carry or hold in the mind over time; harbor.
- To have as a visible characteristic or attribute.
- To be directed or aimed in a certain direction or at a target.
- To extend or proceed in a specified direction.
- To endure something with tolerance or patience.
- To conduct (oneself) in a specified way.
- To hold up; support.
- To be accountable for; assume.
- To have a tolerance for; endure: : endure.
- To have grounds for; call for; warrant.
- To give birth to.
- To produce; yield: : produce.
- To offer; render.
- To yield fruit; produce.
- To have relevance or influence; apply.
- To undertake, as by a promise.
- To be arrogant or pretentious; to claim more than is due.
- To make a supposition; suppose or believe.
- To take up or receive into heaven.
- To clothe oneself in; don.
- To take upon oneself (a duty or obligation).
- To undertake the duties of (an office).
- To take on (an appearance, role, or form, for example); adopt.
- To pretend to have; feign.
- To take for granted; suppose.
- To take over without justification; seize.
BEAR vs ASSUME: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To receive or adopt.
- To pretend to possess; to take in appearance.
- To take to or upon one's self; to take formally and demonstratively; sometimes, to appropriate or take unjustly.
BEAR vs ASSUME: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Have rightfully
- Have within
- Contain or hold
- Bring forth, "The apple tree bore delicious apples this year"
- Bring forth
- Cause to be born
- Maintain (a theory, thoughts, or feelings)
- Of rights, titles, and offices
- To suffer; endure; undergo: as, to bear punishment, blame, etc.
- To support in movement; carry; convey.
- To support; hold up; sustain: as, a pillar or a girder bears the superincumbent weight.
- (idiom) (bear a relation/relationship) To have an association with or relevance to.
- (idiom) (bear a resemblance/liking) /similarity) To be similar to; appear or function like.
- (idiom) (bear down on) To move rapidly toward.
- (idiom) (bear down on) To affect in a harmful or adverse way.
- (idiom) (bear fruit) To come to a satisfactory conclusion or to fruition.
- (idiom) (bear in mind) To hold in one's mind; remember.
- To take into relation or association; adopt; take in; admit: as, “Enoch and Elias were assumed up into heaven,” Abp. Abbot. See assumption, 5.
- To take upon one's self; undertake: as, to assume the responsibility of a proceeding; to assume office; to assume an obligation.
- To take or put on one's self; invest one's self with: as, to assume the garb of a mendicant, or the figure of an animal; to assume a severe aspect; “to assume man's nature,”
- To apply to one's self; appropriate.
- To take for granted or without proof; suppose as a fact; postulate: as, to assume a principle in reasoning.
- To take fictitiously; pretend to possess; take in appearance: as, to assume the garb of humility.
- Synonyms To affect, feign, counterfeit.
- To be arrogant; claim more than is due; presume.
- Take to be the case or to be true
- Take as one's right or possession
- To claim.
BEAR vs ASSUME: RELATED WORDS
- Behave, Pay, Contain, Expect, Wear, Yield, Hold, Stand, Suffer, Accept, Have, Tolerate, Endure, Carry, Assume
- Put on, Sham, Take over, Simulate, Wear, Feign, Adopt, Acquire, Don, Bear, Usurp, Arrogate, Take, Accept, Presume
BEAR vs ASSUME: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Gestate, Comport, Pay, Contain, Expect, Wear, Yield, Hold, Stand, Suffer, Accept, Have, Tolerate, Endure, Carry
- Take on, Get into, Put on, Sham, Take over, Simulate, Wear, Feign, Acquire, Bear, Usurp, Arrogate, Take, Accept, Presume
BEAR vs ASSUME: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Cabin makes a cute wooden bear that looks like a teddy bear made from wood!
- Bear Attack Alaska man scrambles up a tree after being mauled by a mother bear.
- In such caseeach Company shall bear its own cost or bear costs as may be mutually agreed.
- Eagle River Management Area except sheep, goat, black bear, brown bear and small game by permit only.
- Stamina also scales with Bear Form, making Bear Druid very hard to kill.
- Polar bear, great white northern bear found throughout the Arctic region.
- Big Bear lake zipcode and is close to Bear Mountain.
- Big Bear Cabins has the perfect Big Bear Cabin for your trip to Big Bear Lake.
- Our luxury cabins, Bear Mountain Lodge, Bear Hollow and Sleepy Bear Lodge are nestled deep in the Ouachita National Forest near Mena, Arkansas.
- Some of the original Care Bears include Cheer Bear, Grumpy Bear, Bedtime Bear, Tenderheart Bear, Funshine Bear and Wish Bear.
- Assume those would meet the Visual Arts requirement.
- Assume a virtue if you have it not.
- Christianity was more important than many authors assume.
- Assume border color is always in linear space.
- It is even worse to assume a rate.
- Many managers assume this role when implementing change.
- Assume increasing teaching responsibilities as professional growth indicates.
- Maybe they assume his manager is on it.
- This transfer causes one atom to assume a net positive charge, and the other to assume a net negative charge.
- Agiven schedule ofexpected earnings, or dividends, would have a smaller presentvalue if we assume a higher than if we assume a lower intereststructure.
BEAR vs ASSUME: QUESTIONS
- Can I mix and match clothes from build-a-bear and the bear factory?
- Is the Golden Bear Golf bear TEC 30* 6 hybrid right handed?
- What is the best handgun for bear protection in black bear country?
- What kind of Bear is the Little Brown Bear in Yosemite?
- Should you carry bear spray when hiking in Bear Country?
- Should Bear Grylls have just backed away from the bear?
- Which bear is most closely related to the polar bear?
- What happens when a grizzly bear and polar bear mate?
- Did the Bear Whisperer lie about killing a black bear?
- Is polar bear subspecies of the brown bear species?
- Why do substitution models assume independence among sites?
- Were medieval roads better than modern writers assume?
- When legislators assume office how are vacancies filled?
- Do economists assume that people make rational decisions?
- What does Minitab assume when calculating sample sizes?
- Should veterinarians assume/guess the method of feeding?
- When do sociologists assume non spurious causality?
- Can arbitral tribunals assume jurisdiction ratione materiae?
- What does MassDOT assume for underground utilities?
- Should directive controllers assume an active $Digest?