Bear: Old English bera "bear," from Proto-Germanic *beron, literally "the brown (one)" (cf. Old Norse björn, Middle Dutch bere, Dutch beer, Old High German bero, German Bär), from PIE *bher- (3) "bright, brown"
Online Etymology Dictionary
(Note: only the second etymology applies to this word, while the first applies to Borr and Buri)
Borr/Buri: Thorpe interprets the names Buri and Bör to signify "the producing" or "the bringer forth" and "the produced" or "the brought forth" respectively, linking both to Sanskrit bâras, Gothic baurs, Latin por, puer. Cf. Thorpe (1851:4; 141-2).
Borr - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boreas (for the sake of etymology, I have used "boreal"): "northern," late 15c., from Latin borealis, from boreas "north wind," from Greek Boreas, name of the god of the north wind, of unknown origin, perhaps related to words in Balto-Slavic for "mountain" and "forest."
Online Etymology Dictionary
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