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"bare handed" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to someone who is doing something without the aid of tools or weapons. For example, "The brave soldier fought the enemy bare handed."
Exact(6)
Three study groups (n = 12) were compared in a between subjects design, the bare handed (BH), gloved (MG) and gloved with electrical stimulation (MGS) groups.
Although Martial arts historian Stanley Henning admits that Yue's biographies do not mention boxing, he says "he [Yue] almost certainly did practice some form of bare handed fighting" to prepare for his weapons training.
The protagonist, the author's repeat character, Dr. Burke, is a devotee of a Japanese bushido style that includes bare handed fighting, weapons work, and just a whiff of ninjutsu.
You cannot just plug it in; you must charge it first with a resistor, use a 1k ohm resistor because they do not get as hot, it only takes a few seconds to charge, do not do this bare handed.
My fans are not dressed in bunny ears, but perhaps droopy hangovers -- the crew from Superior Seafood and the band, The Bare Handed Bear Handlers, are out in force as Team Crazy Legs.
GIBSET MB Bare Handed Road Kill I'm an environmental scientist and once had this job where I drove around the Western Australian desert talking shit about trees to farmers all day.
Similar(54)
If you have high agility you can bare-hand butterflies.
Bare hands.
And bare hands.
With his bare hands.
Just helpless people with their bare hands".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com