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1 tolerate
'toləreit(to bear or endure; to put up with: I couldn't tolerate his rudeness.) tåle, finne seg i, tolerere- tolerance
- tolerant
- tolerantly
- tolerationtåleverb \/ˈtɒləreɪt\/1) tolerere, tillate, gi lov til, tåle, finne seg i2) tolerere, være tolerant overfor3) fordra, holde ut med4) ( medisin) tåle -
2 live and let live
(to tolerate other people's actions and expect them to tolerate one's own.) leve og la leve -
3 abide
(to put up with; to tolerate: I can't abide noisy people.) utstå, fordra- abide byavvente--------stå1) (om regel, bestemmelse) overholde2) utstå (i nektende og spørrende setninger)3) ( litterært) avvente, vente (på)4) ( litterært) vedbli, forbli5) ( litterært) oppholde seg, ha opphold, boabide by (om regel, bestemmelse) overholde, stå ved, rette seg etter -
4 endure
in'djuə1) (to bear patiently; to tolerate: She endures her troubles bravely; I can endure her rudeness no longer.) holde ut, utstå, tåle2) (to remain firm; to last: You must endure to the end; The memory of her great acting has endured.) holde ut; holde seg, bli stående•- endurancelide--------tåleverb \/ɪnˈdjʊə\/, \/enˈdjʊə\/1) holde ut, tåle, utstå, lide2) ( litterært) fordra, utstå, tålejeg tåler ham ikke \/ jeg kan ikke fordra\/utstå ham3) vare, bestå, bli stående, leve -
5 unbearable
(too painful, unpleasant etc to bear or to tolerate: I am suffering from unbearable toothache.) ikke til å holde ut, utåleligadj. \/ˌʌnˈbeərəbl\/uutholdelig, ikke til å holde ut, utålelig -
6 flesh and blood
1) (relations; family: She is my own flesh and blood.) kjøtt og blod2) (human nature: It is more than flesh and blood can tolerate.) menneskenatur, alminnelig dødelig -
7 stand for
1) (to be a candidate for election to: He stood for Parliament.) stille til valg2) (to be an abbreviation for: HQ stands for Headquarters.) stå for, være forkortelse for3) (to represent: I like to think that our school stands for all that is best in education.) stå for, symbolisere4) (to tolerate: I won't stand for this sort of behaviour.) finne seg i
См. также в других словарях:
Tolerate — Tol er*ate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Tolerated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Tolerating}.] [L. toleratus, p. p. of tolerare, fr. the same root as tollere to lift up, tuli, used as perfect of ferre to bear, latus (for tlatus), used as p. p. of ferre to bear, and … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tolerate — [täl′ər āt΄] vt. tolerated, tolerating [< L toleratus, pp. of tolerare, to bear, sustain, tolerate < IE base * tel , to lift up, bear > THOLE2, TALENT, L tollere, to lift up] 1. to not interfere with; allow; permit [to tolerate heresy] 2 … English World dictionary
tolerate — I verb abide, accept, acquiesce, allow, be lenient, bear, bear with, brook, carry on, consent, endure, forbear, indulge, make the best of, oblige, permit, put up with, receive, sanction, stand, stomach, submit to, suffer, swallow, take patiently … Law dictionary
tolerate — (v.) 1530s, from L. toleratus, pp. of tolerare (see TOLERATION (Cf. toleration)). Related: Tolerated; tolerating … Etymology dictionary
tolerate — endure, abide, *bear, suffer, stand, brook Analogous words: accept, *receive: submit, *yield, bow, succumb … New Dictionary of Synonyms
tolerate — [v] allow, indulge abide, accept, admit, authorize, bear, bear with, blink at*, brook, condone, consent to, countenance, endure, go, go along with, have, hear, humor, live with, permit, pocket, put up with, receive, sanction, sit and take it*,… … New thesaurus
tolerate — ► VERB 1) allow (something that one dislikes or disagrees with) to exist or occur without interference. 2) patiently endure (something unpleasant). 3) be capable of continued exposure to (a drug, toxin, etc.) without adverse reaction. DERIVATIVES … English terms dictionary
tolerate — verb 1 allow sth you do not like ADVERB ▪ barely ▪ just, merely ▪ She actually seemed pleased to see him: most of her visitors she merely tolerated. ▪ grudgingly ▪ … Collocations dictionary
tolerate — 01. It is difficult to [tolerate] a person who continually lies. 02. I find it really difficult to [tolerate] obnoxious people. 03. Living conditions while working tree planting weren t great, but they were certainly [tolerable]. 04. If you take… … Grammatical examples in English
tolerate — tol|e|rate [ˈtɔləreıt US ˈta: ] v [T] [Date: 1500 1600; : Latin; Origin: , past participle of tolerare] 1.) to allow people to do, say, or believe something without criticizing or punishing them →↑tolerant, tolerance ↑tolerance ▪ We simply will… … Dictionary of contemporary English
tolerate */ — UK [ˈtɒləreɪt] / US [ˈtɑləˌreɪt] verb [transitive] Word forms tolerate : present tense I/you/we/they tolerate he/she/it tolerates present participle tolerating past tense tolerated past participle tolerated 1) to allow someone to do something… … English dictionary