See also: baere, Bäre, and bære

Old English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Germanic *bēriz (bearing, carrying). Akin to Old Frisian -ber, Old Saxon -bāri, and Old High German -bāri.

Pronunciation edit

Suffix edit

-bǣre

  1. bearing, having
    blostma (flower) + ‎-bære → ‎blostmbǣre (blooming)
    feþer (feather) + ‎-bære → ‎feþerbǣre (feathered)
    tungol (star) + ‎-bære → ‎tungolbǣre (starry)
    wæstm (fruit) + ‎-bære → ‎wæstmbǣre (fruitful)
  2. having the qualities of, characterized by
    and- (turned) + ‎hēla (heel) + ‎-bære → ‎andelbǣre (inverted)
    ātor (poison) + ‎-bære → ‎ātorbǣre (poisonous)
  3. denoting likeness or similarity to
    ċisel + ‎-bære → ‎ċiselbǣre (gravelly)
  4. producing
    cwealm (death) + ‎-bære → ‎cwealmbǣre (deadly)
    slǣp (sleep) + ‎-bære → ‎slǣpbǣre (somniferous; putting to sleep)

Declension edit

Derived terms edit