Crossword clues for bears
bears
- Chicago's NFL team
- Chicago squad
- Chicago franchise, with "the"
- A sloth of _____
- "Grizzly" beasts
- Yogi and Boo-Boo, for two
- XX winners
- Windy City NFL team
- Windy City gridders
- Windy City 11
- Western park sights
- Trio of children's story
- Tolerates, endures
- Team that Morris Buttermaker coaches
- Team #8
- Storied porridge consumers
- Soldier Field squad
- Soldier Field footballers
- Smokey and Yogi
- Sense of where one is
- Pooh's cousins
- NFL team known as "the Monsters of the Midway"
- NFL team in the "Super Bowl Shuffle"
- Kodiak and bug
- Kiddie-lit trio
- Gummy animals
- Grizzlies, for example
- Grizzlies, e.g
- Golden and teddy
- Golden ___ ,Univerisity of Alberta gridders
- Franchise with the most victories in N.F.L. history
- Fairy-tale characters
- Chicago NFL team
- Chicago footballers
- Chicago football team
- Brown University athletes
- Beasts that see Goldilocks
- Beasts seen by Goldilocks
- Beasts met by Goldilocks
- Baylor eleven
- Bad news beasts?
- Bad news beasts
- Animals that Goldilocks met
- A team in Chicago
- Grizzlies, for instance
- Chicago team, with "Da"
- Puts up with
- Really tough tasks
- Grizzlies, e.g.
- Some circus performers
- Campout dangers
- Stock-market figures
- Nursery threesome
- Chicago 11
- Teddy and honey
- Baylor athletes
- Yellowstone Park denizens
- Bulls' opposites
- Chicago eleven
- Walter Payton's teammates
- Pessimists on Wall Street
- N.F.C. team
- Grizzly and polar
- Surprisers of Goldilocks
- Polar and teddy
- "Bad News" team
- Chicago N.F.L. team
- Super Bowl winners: 1986
- Watering holes draw in European animals
- Ursine animals
- Zoo attractions
- Chicago team
- Nursery rhyme trio
- Market pessimists
- Fairy tale trio
- Super Bowl XX champs
- Fairy tale family
- Colosseum beasts
- Wall Street skeptics
- The Refrigerator'steam
- The Refrigerator's team
- Storied porridge makers
- Storied porridge eaters
- Salmon predators
- Is worthy of, as repeating
- Fairy-tale trio
- Den group
Wiktionary
n. (plural of bear English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: bear)
Wikipedia
Bears is a 2014 nature documentary film about a family of brown bears living in the coastal mountain ranges of Alaska. Directed by Alastair Fothergill and Keith Scholey and narrated by John C. Reilly, Bears was released theatrically by Disneynature on April 18, 2014, making it the studio's seventh nature documentary.
Usage examples of "bears".
What more appropriate than a bear, or several bears, in some way specially, outstandingly, qualified for bearbaiting?
Sherwood came upon some exotic trinkets, simple but impressive carvings of bears, in bone and walrus ivory.
In real life, real bears of course commonly came into camp to rummage through supplies, but they were looking for other food than human flesh.
But anyone who trains bears just wants to put on shows and make a little money.
The real bears had gypsy owners, who tended to be jealous of the new arrival, so superbly talented.
Siberia, to be on the lookout for any performing bears that demonstrated any tricks or abilities out of the ordinary.
In those cities, in accordance with a long tradition, bears were sometimes kept in the town houses of eccentric noblemen.
Chief Four Bears in center stage until he could not see how to adjust it another half an inch, the artist came back to his pretty wife and stood beside her, nibbling inside his lip, glancing over the display for anything else that might need a final touching or tilting or dusting.
Webster, and when the artist heard the timbre of his voice, he was surprised to feel a wave of nostalgia for his old friend Four Bears, whose voice had resonated just like this.
I could not stand to see Four Bears ruined, as he surely would be if he came here.
Arikara chief, and also with the blood of the Arikara, whom Four Bears later had killed with the same lance.
Mah-to-toh-pah, Four Bears, a fourteen-year-old grandson of the renowned Man on a Horse, was squatting in the pit under the eagle trap, watching up through the lattice of boughs toward the gray sky, when he thought he heard shouts from the camp of the Eagle Hunters.
Four Bears stared at the big canoe and he could only believe that he was dreaming of First Man again, dreaming even though his eyes were open and cold wind was blowing his hair around his face.
Four Bears ran fast down the long slope, the cold wind at his back, toward the river.
Eagle Hunting camp, Four Bears stood on the riverbank and watched the white men come shoreward in their red and white canoes, and what was happening was real after all, but more exciting even than the dream of First Man.