This moderation both of speech and conduct was especially distinguished in an age which tolerated the fierce invectives of Filelfo, and applauded the vindictive courage of Cellini.
If there were, this form of penance would not have been so long approved or at all events tolerated by the Church.
But when it is carried beyond these limits, though it may still be tolerated because of the support it receives from its biological basis, it is no longer enjoyed.
That was a great honor, of course, though formerly the influence of the archducal party had made the heir-apparent more tolerated than respected in that very group.
If the German people had thought their governments--there are many governments in Germany--less infallible they would not have tolerated the absolutism of the Prussian Junker.
She had barely tolerated him hitherto, but now she began to despise him.
In a publicly organised form, betting is illegal, but the evil is a difficult one to deal with, and it is now tolerated in France, if not formally permitted.
It cannot, then, be supposed that the officials of the Roman Empire would havetolerated the erection of a Christian church.
Too long have we yielded a submissive obedience to the tyrannical domination of an inflated oligarchy; too long have we tolerated their arrogance and self-conceit; too long have we submitted to their unjust and savage exactions.
Mulbridge, survived to illustrate the magnanimity of his fellow-townsmen during the first year of the civil war, as a tolerated Copperhead.
Church and the clergy from all the positions of public trust they still hold, and reducing the Church to the level of a sect tolerated and as far as possible ignored by the State, and secularizing education, marriage and family life.
No idolatry, nor anything likely to be associated with it, was to be tolerated from any one in the holy camp.
This letter from Barbaczy contained the following lines: "Ministers: You will understand that no French citizens can be tolerated within the positions occupied by the Austrian forces.
Hence we silently tolerated your festivals, and pray you to grant us the same toleration.
How many other things might be tolerated in peace, and left to conscience, had we but charity, and were it not the chief stronghold of our hypocrisy to be ever judging one another?
Shakespeare, though he has written with spotless purity, yet bears traces of the toleratedlicentiousness of the Elizabethan age.
The age is philanthropic, and wages war with every form of vice, poverty, and suffering, and is greatly shocked at the evils it finds past ages tolerated without ever making an effort to remove them, hardly even to mitigate them.
It was a tolerated thing, he felt, just as sometimes he had felt that the Crown was a tolerated thing.
If such expressions as the above were tolerated in a country in which Catholicity predominated so extensively, how can it be maintained that such a religion tends to enslave the human race, and that its doctrines are favorable to despotism?
It is impossible that such spectacles should be toleratedamong modern nations, however corrupt their manners may be.
If this were the only evil of the bill, its existence ought not to be tolerated an hour.
The disciplinary methods at the bagnes were brutal enough, but the severity of the system was softened by privileges and concessions, that would not be tolerated in any modern prison.
Vidocq confided in the Chief, and explained his situation, saying, if his presence in Paris was tolerated and he was assured immunity from arrest, he could promise much valuable information.
The camp of Metternich and Francis I tolerated no Jews within its domains; only by way of exception a few rich families with their dependents were tolerated under various extraordinary titles.
A struggling state, which hitherto had not tolerated the Jews, now became a new, though not very hospitable, home, where the Jewish race was rejuvenated.
For the Jews in Switzerland, who were tolerated only in two small towns, and even there were so enslaved that they must have died out, Mendelssohn procured some alleviation through his opponent Lavater.
Hitherto only about ten families were tolerated in the town as "protection Jews," who were forbidden to engage in trade, join the guilds, or obtain possession of houses.
Jews from the rest of the world, and the pursuit of usury to the injury of members of other creeds, if not prescribed, was at any rate tolerated by the Jewish law.
Unhappily there had just been a papal election at Rome after the death of Clement IX, so that the head of the church, though Jews weretolerated in his states, could not be prevailed upon to assume a decided attitude.
The cities which had hitherto not tolerated them were to be supported in this course, and naturally Jews were not to be admitted to any office, nor even permitted to defend their country.
Hitherto, he had beentolerated in Berlin only as a retainer of his employer.
He quickly assimilated such elements of knowledge as were connected with his previous acquirements, such as Christian theology and the commonplace philosophy tolerated in Austria under Metternich.
Small offenses were punished in a way which would not be tolerated in our times.
Most of the medical preparations used then would not be tolerated to-day.
I understand that anybody who has an appendix nowadays is looked upon as exceedingly vulgar and is not even tolerated in good society.
He couldn't, so then, after all, it was quite clear that he was tolerated because he had nothing but money.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tolerated" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: admitted; allowed; permissible; permitted; venial