bare
1adjective, bar·er, bar·est.
verb (used with object), bared, bar·ing.
Origin of bare
1SYNONYMS FOR bare
synonym study for bare
OTHER WORDS FROM bare
bar·ish, adjective bare·ness, nounWords nearby bare
Definition for bare (2 of 4)
Definition for bare (3 of 4)
verb (used with object), bore or (Archaic) bare; borne or born; bear·ing.
verb (used without object), bore or (Archaic) bare; borne or born; bear·ing.
Verb Phrases
Origin of bear
1synonym study for bear
usage note for bear
Definition for bare (4 of 4)
noun, plural bears, (especially collectively) bear.
adjective
verb (used with object), beared, bear·ing.
Origin of bear
2OTHER WORDS FROM bear
bear·like, adjectiveABOUT THIS WORD
What else does bare mean?
Bare is UK slang for very or lots of.
Where does bare come from?
The slang bare originates in Multicultural London English in the 1990s and was widely reported on as UK slang in the 2010s in the mainstream presence.
A contributor to its spread is the popular, London-based genre of rap music called Grime, which features aggressive, hard-hitting beats and lyrics. In their 2016 song “Too Many Man,” for instance, Grime group Boy Better Know sang about the club: “We need some more girls in here…Bare man not enough girls in here.” That track featured the “Godfather of Grime” himself, Wiley, who wrote “bare hype, bare bullshit, bare drama” on his 2015 mixtape Tunnel Vision Volume 1.
In 2013, a school in south London attempted to ban students from using words like bare on campus, believing it hurt their employment chances later in life.
How is bare used in real life?
Bare is used as an intensifier. If you earn bare money, you earn “a lot” of money.
being an estate agent was one of my ideas might actually get into it tbh you earn bare money
— kian (@ky6hh) October 18, 2018
If you are bare hungry, as another example, then you are “extremely” hungry.
If you were in the presence of bare women, as many who use the word often claim to be, that would be “many girls.”
Thanks to the popularity of Grime music and the diversity of London, bare has spread beyond UK slang into mainstream youth slang. It’s still closely associated with London slang, however.
More examples of bare:
“School slang ban is bare extra, innit?“
—Felix Allen, The Sun (headline), October, 2013
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.
Example sentences from the Web for bare
British Dictionary definitions for bare (1 of 5)
adjective
verb
Derived forms of bare
bareness, nounWord Origin for bare
British Dictionary definitions for bare (2 of 5)
British Dictionary definitions for bare (3 of 5)
noun the Bear
British Dictionary definitions for bare (4 of 5)
verb bears, bearing, bore or borne (mainly tr)
Word Origin for bear
British Dictionary definitions for bare (5 of 5)
noun plural bears or bear
- a speculator who sells in anticipation of falling prices to make a profit on repurchase
- (as modifier)a bear market Compare bull 1 (def. 5)