- Bear With Me ~ Trophy Walkthrough - PlayStationTrophies. org
Time to play the real Bear With Me game, to earn those DLC trophies EPISODE 1 Amber's Room Click desk drawer – Get broken magnifier Pick up glasses (on cardboard box in back left corner) Click case under bed Pick up battery from case Talk to Millie There was a fire OK Millie, I'll go ask him Exit to Closet Ted's Office (whatever
- Bear with me - WordReference Forums
Estoy escuchando una canción de Sonata Arctica y hay una frase que dice: "I wish you bear with me" He buscado en el diccionario y aparte de "oso", bear significa "aguantar, soportar o resistir" Recordando mis clases de inglés, la estructura con wish la he estudiado seguido de un verbo en
- Bear with me past tense - WordReference Forums
To me, it means, "hang in there with me", "don't give up on me", "tolerate (humor) me a little longer" It's the past tense, it gets sticky I might say "I asked him to bear with me and he hung around (waited) for twenty minutes and then lost patience" For me, the expression "to bear with someone" extends beyond the telephone
- Bare [bear] with me - WordReference Forums
The expression is actually, "bear with me," (ooh boy, "bare with me" has a whole different meaning!!) The word "bear" in this instance means to have a tolerance for, to endure something, "Be patient with me "
- you have to bear with me a little bit here - WordReference Forums
Bear with me, it's true, can mean "wait for a little while", and that's what the watch-fixer has in mind in your examples above But its more general meaning (which can include waiting) is "be patient" or "have patience" or "be tolerant"
- PST Quick Time Event - Going on a Bear Hunt ~ Discussion Thread
Going on a Bear Hunt QTE We're going on a Bear Hunt! We're going to catch a big one What a beautiful day WE'RE NOT SCARED Oh-oh! GRASS! Long, wavy grass We can't go over it We can't go under it Oh, no! WE'VE GOT TO GO THROUGH IT! It sure would be nice to have three items to help with this b
- bear a child - WordReference Forums
The verb "bear" literally gives me a sense of "carry a burden", similar as its other senses, such as "bear fruit","bear gifts, arms" Let's take "bear fruit" for example, after blossoms are pollinated , trees start to bear fruit "bear" doesn't have a sense of "drop" here It seems "bear fruit" doesn't refer to the moment when fruit is ripe
- If you will bear with me a little longer | WordReference Forums
The speaker is saying "I know you don't have to, but I would like you to let me continue in my own way and you will have the answer you seek when I'm done" A lot of times that is mostly just polite wording, because the speaker expects the listener to bear with them and give them a chance
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