-
21 dulden
♦voorbeelden:1 geen tegenspraak dulden • not bear being contradicted, tolerate no contradiction2 dergelijke overtredingen kunnen niet meer geduld worden • such offences can no longer be toleratedeen voorzitter die geen tegenspraak duldt • a chairman who won't be contradictedde oude directeur werd door zijn collega alleen nog geduld • the old director was now merely tolerated by his colleague -
22 hitte/lawaai niet kunnen uitstaan
hitte/lawaai niet kunnen uitstaannot be able to endure/stand/bear the heat/noiseVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > hitte/lawaai niet kunnen uitstaan
-
23 uithouden
-
24 verdragen
♦voorbeelden:1 hij kan de gedachte niet verdragen, dat … • he cannot bear/stand the idea that …ik kan veel verdragen, maar nu is 't genoeg • I can stand/take a lot, but enough is enough -
25 verduren
♦voorbeelden:1 heel wat moeten verduren • have to put up with/suffer a great dealhet zwaar te verduren hebben • 〈 kritiek krijgen〉 be at/on the receiving end of severe complaints, take a beating/some hard knocks; 〈 in moeilijkheden〉 have a hard/rough time of it; 〈 ontberen〉 suffer heavily/great hardships
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Endure — En*dure , v. t. 1. To remain firm under; to sustain; to undergo; to support without breaking or yielding; as, metals endure a certain degree of heat without melting; to endure wind and weather. [1913 Webster] Both were of shining steel, and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Endure — En*dure , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Endured}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Enduring}.] [F. endurer; pref. en (L. in) + durer to last. See {Dure}, v. i., and cf. {Indurate}.] 1. To continue in the same state without perishing; to last; to remain. [1913 Webster]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
enduré — enduré, ée (an du ré, rée) part. passé. Des fatigues endurées avec constance. • Lors tous les déplaisirs endurés sans murmure Deviendront des sujets d une allégresse pure, CORN. Imit. I, 24. • Souvent avec prudence un outrage enduré, Aux… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
endure — [v1] bear hardship abide, accustom, allow, bear the brunt*, be patient with, brave, brook, cope with, countenance, eat, encounter, experience, face, feel, go through, grin and bear it*, hang in*, keep up, know, live out, live through, meet with,… … New thesaurus
endure — I (last) verb abide, be constant, be durable, be firm, be permanent, be preserved, be prolonged, be protracted, be timeless, carry on, continue, continue to be, continue to exist, durare, exist, exist uninterruptedly, exist without break, extend … Law dictionary
endure — early 14c., to undergo or suffer (especially without breaking); late 14c. to continue in existence, from O.Fr. endurer (12c.) make hard, harden; bear, tolerate; keep up, maintain, from L. indurare make hard, in L.L. harden (the heart) against,… … Etymology dictionary
endure — 1 *continue, last, abide, persist Analogous words: survive, outlast, *outlive: *stay, remain, wait, linger, tarry, abide Antonyms: perish Contrasted words: disintegrate, crumble, *decay 2 abide, tolerate, suffer, * … New Dictionary of Synonyms
enduré — Enduré, [endur]ée. part. pass … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
endure — ► VERB 1) suffer (something painful and prolonged) patiently. 2) tolerate. 3) remain in existence. DERIVATIVES endurable adjective. ORIGIN Latin indurare harden … English terms dictionary
endure — [en door′, endyoor′; indoor′, indyoor′] vt. endured, enduring [ME duren < OFr endurer < LL (Ec) indurare, to harden the heart < LL, to harden, hold out, last < durus, hard: see DURABLE] 1. to hold up under (pain, fatigue, etc.);… … English World dictionary
endure — 01. The poor students were obliged to [endure] three days of tests at the end of the session. 02. Students have to [endure] a lot of pressure during exam time. 03. He can t [endure] the cold weather in Alaska because he comes from a warm country … Grammatical examples in English