Dictionaries:

bear:

Refers, usually, to a large, hairy and hefty man ; he may also be bearded and older.
See Also: aborted, abortive, accessory urethral canal, acknowledged father, amphigenic invert, anal coitus, anal intercourse, anal-genital intercourse, angel with a dirty face, anogenital intercourse, axe wound, baby boomer, baby buster, bastard, bear-garden language, bearskin, bio boy, biological male, Bitchville, bore, born in the vestry, break a leg, Buckinger's boot, bush child, buster, Caprihorny, come through the side door, congenital syphilis, cryptorchidism, cypridophobia, cyprinophobia, cypriphobia, factory equipped, fatherless, fertility symbols, fruitful vine, fuck-face, Generation X, genetic male, grit, harlot, hereditary syphilis, hermaphrodite, honey, illegitimate, illegitimate child, Inter faeces et urinem nascimur, intersexual, little deduction, little dividend, misborn, monogamous, monogamy, mother, mulatto, naked, natural child, nullipara, plushie, quandong, single, Studgitarius, sweet talk, Torquemada, Tomas de, true hermaphrodite, undescended testes, vagitarius, Venus flytrap, wet and willing, wet as an otters pocket, as, wet-on

Quotes Containing bear:
Wall street broker Bullard Bear (Jim Backus) watching Molly Thatcher (Lee Remick) leave the office in The Wheeler Dealers (1963): 'Women shouldn't be allowed to have lunch clubs. We've got to keep them off balance, disorganized, clawing and scratching at each other, otherwise they might turn-on us.'
Wall street broker Bullard Bear (Jim Backus) watching Molly Thatcher (Lee Remick) leave the office in The Wheeler Dealers (1963): ''Women shouldn''t be allowed to have lunch clubs. We''ve got to keep them off balance, disorganized, clawing and scratching at each other, otherwise they might turn-on us.''
Wall street broker Bullard Bear (Jim Backus) watching Molly Thatcher (Lee Remick) leave the office in The Wheeler Dealers (1963): 'Women shouldn't be allowed to have lunch clubs. We've got to keep them off balance, disorganized, clawing and scratching at each other, otherwise they might turn-on us.'


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