Tolerates Sentence Examples
The tenth canon tolerates the marriages of deacons who previous to ordination had reserved the right to take a wife; the thirteenth forbids chorepiscopi to ordain presbyters or deacons; the eighteenth safeguards the right of the people in objecting to the appointment of a bishop whom they do not wish.
It tolerates a wide range of soil pH, being found on both mildly acidic and calcareous substrates.
It also says the military government in Yangon refuses to hand over known drugs warlords and tolerates money laundering.
At most, it tolerates one annual loon.
A nice patio palm, it tolerates less than ideal growing conditions.
A profuse bloomer, Chuck Hayes gardenia tolerates temperatures slightly cooler than Kleim's Hardy and is reported to produce nearly triple the amount of flowers as Kleim's Hardy.
The Philips 18 watt SL/O Outdoor is one reliable choice that tolerates cold temperatures if it is protected from wind.
In the case of Omega-3 fatty acids, it seems that the body tolerates Omega 3 supplementation well.
One way to avoid these side effects is to start with a small dose of Omega-3 fatty acids and increase as your body tolerates it.
Ronnie doesn't know any of those people and he keeps saying I should step up to the plate, like it's the least I could do 'cause he already tolerates me like a bad case of hemorrhoids.
AdvertisementThe Argentine constitution recognizes the Roman Catholic religion as that of the state, but tolerates all others.
The additional qualification of " Roman " she tolerates, since it proclaims her doctrine of the see of Rome as the keystone of Catholicism; but to herself she is "the Catholic Church," and her members are "Catholics."
While a new spirit which compares and tolerates thus sprang from the Crusades, the large sphere of new knowledge and experience which they gave brought new material at once for scientific thought and poetic imagination.
We do not imply that in other countries the Church can always find exemption from legislative measures imposed upon her by the civil authorities, for example, in Italy, Prussia and Russia; but here it is a situation de facto rather than de jure, which the Church tolerates for the sake of convenience; and these regulations only form part of the local canon law in a very irregular sense.