- adjectivebare (adjective) · barer (comparative adjective) · barest (superlative adjective)
- (of a person or part of the body) not clothed or covered:"he was bare from the waist up" · "she padded in bare feet towards the door"
- without the appropriate, usual, or natural covering:"bare floorboards" · "a clump of bare aspen trees"
- without the appropriate or usual contents:"a bare cell with just a mattress"
- (bare of)devoid of; without:"the interior was bare of plaster"
- unconcealed; without disguise:"an ordeal that would lay bare a troubled family background"
- without addition; basic and simple:"he outlined the bare essentials of the story" · "a strange, bare production of Twelfth Night"
- only just sufficient:"a bare majority"
- surprisingly small in number or amount:"all you need to get started with this program is a bare 10K bytes of memory"
verbbare (verb) · bares (third person present) · bared (past tense) · bared (past participle) · baring (present participle)- uncover (a part of the body or other thing) and expose it to view:"he bared his chest to show his scar"
determinerBRITISH ENGLISHinformal- a large amount or number of:"I've got bare work to do"
adverbBRITISH ENGLISHinformalbare (adverb)- very; really (used as an intensifier):"you are bare lazy"
OriginOld English bær (noun), barian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch baar.
Bokep
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