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The phrase "bare with" is not grammatically correct and should not be used in written English.
The correct phrase is "bear with," which means to have patience or understanding with someone or something. Example: "Please bear with me as I finish this project. I promise it won't take much longer."
Exact(58)
Form and structure are laid bare with blazing clarity.
The walls were also bare, with a fresh coat of peachy-orange paint.
The white tablecloths are gone; tables are bare with placemats and cloth napkins.
Tables are black and bare with white paper place mats; napkins are cloth.
He nails people with just a few words; strips them bare with a single phrase.
Even the stage is unusually bare, with just a carpeting of thick brown mud.
In Maxwell's adaptation, the gray stage is bare, with four poles that reach up into the rafters.
To see that striving and posturing laid bare with the curse of hindsight can be a trying exercise in humility.
Waite returned to find his flat stripped bare, with his clothing, food, appliances, cutlery, television and even carpets removed.
Karpov's king was laid bare with a stunning knight sacrifice and GK's queen and rook entered to deliver checkmate.
It was bleak and bare, with a bricked-up fireplace, dusty windows and Blu-tack-pocked wallpaper.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com