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 born [bɒ:n]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 天生的
bear的过去分词

  1. The baby was born on 8 o'clock.
    婴儿在8点钟出生。
  2. I've never heard such nonsense in all my born days!
    我一生中从未听到过这种胡言乱语。
  3. Her socialist beliefs were born of a hatred of injustice.
    她的社会主义信念来自她对社会上不公平现象的痛恨。


born
[ noun ]
  1. British nuclear physicist (born in Germany) honored for his contributions to quantum mechanics (1882-1970)

  2. <noun.person>
[ adj ]
  1. brought into existence

  2. <adj.all>
    he was a child born of adultery
  3. being talented through inherited qualities

  4. <adj.all>
    a natural leader
    a born musician
    an innate talent


Bear \Bear\ (b[^a]r), v. t. [imp. {Bore} (b[=o]r) (formerly
{Bare} (b[^a]r)); p. p. {Born} (b[^o]rn), {Borne} (b[=o]rn);
p. pr. & vb. n. {Bearing}.] [OE. beren, AS. beran, beoran, to
bear, carry, produce; akin to D. baren to bring forth, G.
geb["a]ren, Goth. ba['i]ran to bear or carry, Icel. bera, Sw.
b["a]ra, Dan. b[ae]re, OHG. beran, peran, L. ferre to bear,
carry, produce, Gr. fe`rein, OSlav. brati to take, carry,
OIr. berim I bear, Skr. bh[.r] to bear. [root]92. Cf.
{Fertile}.]
1. To support or sustain; to hold up.

2. To support and remove or carry; to convey.

I 'll bear your logs the while. --Shak.

3. To conduct; to bring; -- said of persons. [Obs.]

Bear them to my house. --Shak.

4. To possess and use, as power; to exercise.

Every man should bear rule in his own house.
--Esther i.
22.

5. To sustain; to have on (written or inscribed, or as a
mark), as, the tablet bears this inscription.

6. To possess or carry, as a mark of authority or
distinction; to wear; as, to bear a sword, badge, or name.

7. To possess mentally; to carry or hold in the mind; to
entertain; to harbor --Dryden.

The ancient grudge I bear him. --Shak.

8. To endure; to tolerate; to undergo; to suffer.

Should such a man, too fond to rule alone,
Bear, like the Turk, no brother near the throne.
--Pope.

I cannot bear
The murmur of this lake to hear. --Shelley.

My punishment is greater than I can bear. --Gen. iv.
13.

9. To gain or win. [Obs.]

Some think to bear it by speaking a great word.
--Bacon.

She was . . . found not guilty, through bearing of
friends and bribing of the judge. --Latimer.

10. To sustain, or be answerable for, as blame, expense,
responsibility, etc.

He shall bear their iniquities. --Is. liii.
11.

Somewhat that will bear your charges. --Dryden.

11. To render or give; to bring forward. ``Your testimony
bear'' --Dryden.

12. To carry on, or maintain; to have. ``The credit of
bearing a part in the conversation.'' --Locke.

13. To admit or be capable of; that is, to suffer or sustain
without violence, injury, or change.

In all criminal cases the most favorable
interpretation should be put on words that they can
possibly bear. --Swift.

14. To manage, wield, or direct. ``Thus must thou thy body
bear.'' --Shak. Hence: To behave; to conduct.

Hath he borne himself penitently in prison? --Shak.

15. To afford; to be to; to supply with.

His faithful dog shall bear him company. --Pope.

16. To bring forth or produce; to yield; as, to bear apples;
to bear children; to bear interest.

Here dwelt the man divine whom Samos bore.
--Dryden.

Note: In the passive form of this verb, the best modern usage
restricts the past participle born to the sense of
brought forth, while borne is used in the other senses
of the word. In the active form, borne alone is used as
the past participle.

{To bear down}.
(a) To force into a lower place; to carry down; to
depress or sink. ``His nose, . . . large as were the
others, bore them down into insignificance.''
--Marryat.
(b) To overthrow or crush by force; as, to bear down an
enemy.

{To bear a hand}.
(a) To help; to give assistance.
(b) (Naut.) To make haste; to be quick.

{To bear in hand}, to keep (one) up in expectation, usually
by promises never to be realized; to amuse by false
pretenses; to delude. [Obs.] ``How you were borne in hand,
how crossed.'' --Shak.

{To bear in mind}, to remember.

{To bear off}.
(a) To restrain; to keep from approach.
(b) (Naut.) To remove to a distance; to keep clear from
rubbing against anything; as, to bear off a blow; to
bear off a boat.
(c) To gain; to carry off, as a prize.
(d) (Backgammon) To remove from the backgammon board into
the home when the position of the piece and the dice
provide the proper opportunity; -- the goal of the
game is to bear off all of one's men before the
opponent.

{To bear one hard}, to owe one a grudge. [Obs.] ``C[ae]sar
doth bear me hard.'' --Shak.

{To bear out}.
(a) To maintain and support to the end; to defend to the
last. ``Company only can bear a man out in an ill
thing.'' --South.
(b) To corroborate; to confirm.

{To bear up}, to support; to keep from falling or sinking.
``Religious hope bears up the mind under sufferings.''
--Addison.

Syn: To uphold; sustain; maintain; support; undergo; suffer;
endure; tolerate; carry; convey; transport; waft.


Born \Born\ (b[^o]rn), p. p. & a. [See {Bear}, v. t.]
1. Brought forth, as an animal; brought into life; introduced
by birth.

No one could be born into slavery in Mexico.
--Prescott.

2. Having from birth a certain character; by or from birth;
by nature; innate; as, a born liar. ``A born matchmaker.''
--W. D. Howells.

{Born again} (Theol.), regenerated; renewed; having received
spiritual life. ``Except a man be born again, he can not
see the kingdom of God.'' --John iii. 3.

{Born days}, days since one was born; lifetime. [Colloq.]

  1. "We knew as a country who we were, what we were, and there was a foreign policy that was basically born in a consensus and executed forthrightly."
  2. Many of these graduates, like me, are going to have to continue to work when their children are born and when they are young.
  3. Thirty-five calves were born with such abnormalities as six legs or missing ribs, Kudin said.
  4. It will be nice for Beatrice to have someone to play with," said the former Sarah Ferguson, who is due in March and whose first baby was born 13 months ago.
  5. D'Abo was born in London to a British father and a Russian mother.
  6. Bing, born in Vienna, Austria, went to Britain in the 1930s, where he headed the Glyndebourne Opera and founded the famed Edinburgh Festival.
  7. The man born in 1961 has never known government as a "provider."
  8. Some people were not born to live in a socialist system. Miguel is one of them.
  9. And that changes politics." EDITOR'S NOTE _ Bill Huggins, born in London, is a photographer and picture editor who retired from The Associated Press earlier this year.
  10. The first gorilla twins born alive in captivity in the Western Hemisphere will be permanently separated next week when one is shipped to a Nebraska zoo.
  11. In mice, an average of about eight live animals are born for every 20 micro-injected embryos.
  12. He was born into the church, but he said few are, only about 10 percent.
  13. Each uses ethnic working-class roots to seek support from a constituency composed of police officers, firefighters and other blue-collar residents who are first-generation Americans born of Eastern European parents.
  14. Theotokis was born on the Ionian island of Corfu and studied law in Switzerland and France.
  15. Babies whose mothers take cocaine during pregnancy _ even once _ can be born with problems that make them harder to care for once they are home.
  16. Television talk show host Oprah Winfrey came home for the renaming of the winding gravel road that runs in front of the house where she was born.
  17. People born under the sign of the ox are said to be marathon workers and empire-builders.
  18. Two litters of red wolf pups were born in the refuge this year, Parker says.
  19. A major factor in the rise in births in recent years is that the 360 million people born between 1962 and 1976 have reached child-bearing age.
  20. And he said children born to Americans living abroad are often denied U.S. citizenship in their own right.
  21. Agerpres also quoted a leading medical official as saying "a great many crippled babies were born" because of inadequate maternity care, malnutrition and other complications.
  22. But none of the banks born during the petrodollar recycling boom of the early 1980s has fully achieved its international ambitions.
  23. About one of every 3,500 male infants is born with the defect.
  24. Little unity is evident among the dozens of parties born of concern for man's ravaging of the planet, but all benefit from growing worry about pollutants in the air, water and food supplies.
  25. East German Trabant cars were welcomed by cheers and honking horns as they slowly wended their way down the boulevard, now the scene of the wildest celebrations since the Berlin Wall was born in the Cold War.
  26. Thus was born a business empire: Beegotten Creations, a whimsical little company that aims to provide novelty items to every expectant relative.
  27. Industry officials acknowledge that the campaign is born of desperation.
  28. Thornburgh's dispute with the ABA was born of an apparent disagreement over discussions he and his aides had with bar officials over changes in the ABA's guidelines on judicial screening.
  29. Jive Bunny was born.
  30. Midnight Mass will be celebrated at St. Catherine's Church, part of the Church of the Nativity complex built over the cave where the Bible says Jesus was born.
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