different between unbear vs unfear
unbear
English
Etymology
un- +? bear
Verb
unbear (third-person singular simple present unbears, present participle unbearing, simple past unbore, past participle unborne)
- (transitive) To remove or loose the bearing rein of (a horse).
Anagrams
- unbare, urbane
unbear From the web:
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unfear
English
Etymology
From un- +? fear.
Noun
unfear (uncountable)
- Absence of fear; fearlessness.
- 2009, John Hough, Seen the Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Gettysburg (page 163)
- It would have been easy now to run on home and beat him there but she did not. She let some seconds go by in which her unfear of him—if unfear it was—would proclaim itself, then turned, with her parasol and basket. “what is it,” she said.
- 2009, John Hough, Seen the Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Gettysburg (page 163)
Anagrams
- furane
unfear From the web:
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