We have no meanings for "more tolerant" in our records yet.
1 This is a more tolerant , a more open, a more progressive society.
2 They seem to be a bit more tolerant over there, he said.
3 We can be glad that we live in a more tolerant age.
4 He was growing more tolerant and benign, even in trifles like this.
5 Augusta Goold herself was more tolerant and more philosophic than her friends.
6 Edmund Grosse felt more tolerant of Billy at Groombridge Castle than elsewhere.
7 No-despite his more tolerant attitude-sheknew that, underneath, his convictions were unchanged.
8 Things aren't as black and white and you become much more tolerant .
9 Over time, however, the law has apparently become more tolerant of Wi-Fi squatting.
10 I'm more tolerant , especially of religion, if that helps my case.
11 U.S. shoppers, for example, are more tolerant about where their clothes are made.
12 Gradually the monopolistic mangroves become more tolerant of the rights of other vegetation.
13 Thus Henry most unquestionably adjudged Protestants the more tolerant of the two sects.
14 Objective: Neonatal lungs are more tolerant to hyperoxic injury than are adult lungs.
15 If the nation had been more lukewarm, it would have been more tolerant .
16 She'd been more tolerant of it since he told her who'd painted it.
Other examples for "more tolerant"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: More tolerant through the time
More tolerant across language varieties