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DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
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Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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7 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
bearing
軸承,關係,影響,意義;方面,方向;舉止,風度
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
bear·ing
名詞
支承面,支承點
From:
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
bearing
軸承
From:
Network Terminology
bearing
方位 軸承
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Bear
v. t.
[
imp.
Bore
(
formerly
Bare
);
p. p.
Born
Borne
(bōrn);
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Bearing
.]
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
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
”
12.
To
carry
on
,
or
maintain
;
to
have
.
“The
credit
of
bearing
a
part
in
the
conversation.”
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
.]
“Cæsar
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
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Bear·ing
n.
1.
The
manner
in
which
one
bears
or
conducts
one's
self
;
mien
;
behavior
;
carriage
.
I
know
him
by
his
bearing
.
--
Shak
.
2.
Patient
endurance
;
suffering
without
complaint
.
3.
The
situation
of
one
object
,
with
respect
to
another
,
such
situation
being
supposed
to
have
a
connection
with
the
object
,
or
influence
upon
it
,
or
to
be
influenced
by
it
;
hence
,
relation
;
connection
.
But
of
this
frame
,
the
bearings
and
the
ties
,
The
strong
connections
,
nice
dependencies
. --
Pope
.
4.
Purport
;
meaning
;
intended
significance
;
aspect
.
5.
The
act
,
power
,
or
time
of
producing
or
giving
birth
;
as
,
a
tree
in
full
bearing
;
a
tree
past
bearing
.
[His
mother
]
in
travail
of
his
bearing
.
--
R
.
of
Gloucester
.
6.
Arch.
(a)
That
part
of
any
member
of
a
building
which
rests
upon
its
supports
;
as
,
a
lintel
or
beam
may
have
four
inches
of
bearing
upon
the
wall
.
(b)
The
portion
of
a
support
on
which
anything
rests
.
(c)
Improperly
,
the
unsupported
span
;
as
,
the
beam
has
twenty
feet
of
bearing
between
its
supports
.
7.
Mach.
(a)
The
part
of
an
axle
or
shaft
in
contact
with
its
support
,
collar
,
or
boxing
;
the
journal
.
(b)
The
part
of
the
support
on
which
a
journal
rests
and
rotates
.
8.
Her.
Any
single
emblem
or
charge
in
an
escutcheon
or
coat
of
arms
--
commonly
in
the
pl.
A
carriage
covered
with
armorial
bearings
.
--
Thackeray
.
9.
Naut.
(a)
The
situation
of
a
distant
object
,
with
regard
to
a
ship's
position
,
as
on
the
bow
,
on
the
lee
quarter
,
etc
.;
the
direction
or
point
of
the
compass
in
which
an
object
is
seen
;
as
,
the
bearing
of
the
cape
was
W
.
N
.
W
.
(b)
pl.
The
widest
part
of
a
vessel
below
the
plank-sheer
.
(c)
pl.
The
line
of
flotation
of
a
vessel
when
properly
trimmed
with
cargo
or
ballast
.
Ball bearings
.
See
under
Ball
.
To bring one to his bearings
,
to
bring
one
to
his
senses
.
To lose one's bearings
,
to
become
bewildered
.
To take bearings
,
to
ascertain
by
the
compass
the
position
of
an
object
;
to
ascertain
the
relation
of
one
object
or
place
to
another
;
to
ascertain
one's
position
by
reference
to
landmarks
or
to
the
compass
;
hence
(
Fig
.),
to
ascertain
the
condition
of
things
when
one
is
in
trouble
or
perplexity
.
Syn:
--
Deportment
;
gesture
;
mien
;
behavior
;
manner
;
carriage
;
demeanor
;
port
;
conduct
;
direction
;
relation
;
tendency
;
influence
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
bearing
adj
1: (
of
a
structural
member
)
withstanding
a
weight
or
strain
[
syn
:
bearing(a)
] [
ant
:
nonbearing
]
2:
producing
or
yielding
; "
an
interest-bearing
note
";
"
fruit-bearing
trees
"
n
1:
relevant
relation
or
interconnection
; "
those
issues
have
no
bearing
on
our
situation
"
2:
the
direction
or
path
along
which
something
moves
or
along
which
it
lies
[
syn
:
heading
,
aim
]
3:
dignified
manner
or
conduct
[
syn
:
comportment
,
presence
,
mien
]
4:
characteristic
way
of
bearing
one's
body
; "
stood
with
good
posture
" [
syn
:
carriage
,
posture
]
5:
heraldry
consisting
of
a
design
or
image
depicted
on
a
shield
[
syn
:
charge
,
heraldic bearing
,
armorial
bearing
]
6:
a
rotating
support
placed
between
moving
parts
to
allow
them
to
move
easily
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