A disposition to tolerate or accept people or situations.
The practice of allowing or permitting a thing, person, or idea of which one disapproves.
1 The result of the scheme of toleration was an increase in disorder.
2 It heightens pleasure enormously, to say nothing of the increase in toleration .
3 The distinction between civil toleration and theological toleration is vain and childish.
4 The Pacification of Ghent had found the door open to religious toleration .
5 There is a greatness in modern toleration which our ancestors knew not.
6 Milton-ultra liberal as he was-excepted the Catholics from his plan of toleration .
7 The boldness and license of his satires are far beyond modern toleration .
8 The spirit of toleration manifested by Catharine is worthy of all praise.
9 Under this spirit of toleration the Christian church grew with great rapidity.
10 He showed plainly that the Protestants were to find no toleration henceforth.
11 No Northern party would ever venture to give it toleration after this.
12 He had sort of manly toleration for all her whims and weaknesses.
13 Hence, though late, arose the paradoxical principle and salutary practice of toleration .
14 There is a point where toleration sinks into sheer baseness and poltroonery.
15 Virginia spoke in patient toleration of Miss Bentley's strange lapse of memory.
16 And can toleration in the active-spirited be ever anything more than approximate?
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Translations for toleration
Toleration в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки