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Discover Ludwig"bear it on" is a phrase that is sometimes used in written English.
It typically means to continue or proceed in spite of difficulty, hardship, or opposition. For example, "Although the task was difficult, he was determined to bear it on."
Exact(3)
What choice had the boisterous, blushing scullery maids in their charming kitchen frocks but to hoist the enormous cake on its supportive pyre and bear it on their shoulders into the Great Hall for the merriment of many?
I'll bear it on me.
Man can bear it on his shoulders in order to ascend anew toward the light sorrow- fully: he can walk forever, walk... Thou who art able, give us our daily resurrection!
Similar(56)
Could she really have borne it on her conscience had she shut off a potential supply line?
None bore it on the chromosome, in marked contrast to Group I C. botulinum, which has several members with chromosomal neurotoxin cluster(s), plasmid neurotoxin cluster(s), or both (Hill et al. 2009; Dover et al. 2013).
No man could bear it: It would be hell on Earth".
This went on for years, and his wife stayed on and bore it in silence.
"He believes the imaginative process is restricted if you bring theory to bear on it before it happens.
But this is just speculation, and the data in the paper does not bear on it, so we prefer not to bring it up.
SAP could build a similar product to Qualtrics, or they could simply buy it and put the massive SAP salesforce to bear on it.
… This means that continuity and survival of a pristine cultural product depends on the normative considerations that will be brought to bear on it by subsequent generations' ([ 5]. p221).
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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