| 1. | to allow the existence, presence, practice, or act of without prohibition or hindrance; permit. |
| 2. | to endure without repugnance; put up with: I can tolerate laziness, but not incompetence. |
| 3. | Medicine/Medical. to endure or resist the action of (a drug, poison, etc.). |
| 4. | Obsolete. to experience, undergo, or sustain, as pain or hardship. |
tol·er·ate (tŏl'ə-rāt') tr.v. tol·er·at·ed, tol·er·at·ing, tol·er·ates
[Latin tolerāre, tolerāt-, to bear; see telə- in Indo-European roots.] tol'er·a'tive adj., tol'er·a'tor n. |
tolerate tol·er·ate (tŏl'ə-rāt')
v. tol·er·at·ed, tol·er·at·ing, tol·er·ates
To allow without prohibiting or opposing; permit.
To put up with; endure.
To have tolerance for a substance or pathogen.