endure 的 2 个定义
en·dured, en·dur·ing.
- to hold out against; sustain without impairment or yielding; undergo: to endure great financial pressures with equanimity.
- to bear without resistance or with patience; tolerate:I cannot endure your insults any longer.
- to admit of; allow; bear: His poetry is such that it will not endure a superficial reading.
en·dured, en·dur·ing.
- to continue to exist; last: These words will endure as long as people live who love freedom.
- to support adverse force or influence of any kind; suffer without yielding; suffer patiently: Even in the darkest ages humanity has endured.
- to have or gain continued or lasting acknowledgment or recognition, as of worth, merit or greatness: His plays have endured for more than three centuries.
endure 近义词
bear hardship
endure 的近义词 46 个
- brave
- encounter
- experience
- face
- feel
- go through
- know
- ride out
- suffer
- sustain
- tolerate
- undergo
- weather
- withstand
- abide
- accustom
- allow
- brook
- countenance
- eat
- permit
- stand
- stick
- stomach
- support
- swallow
- take
- be patient with
- bear the brunt
- cope with
- grin and bear it
- hang in
- keep up
- live out
- live through
- meet with
- never say die
- put up with
- repress feelings
- resign oneself
- sit through
- stick it out
- subject to
- submit to
- take it
- take patiently
endure 的反义词 18 个
continue; be durable
endure 的近义词 40 个
- exist
- go on
- hold
- linger
- live
- live on
- persist
- remain
- ride out
- stay
- survive
- sustain
- abide
- be
- bide
- cling
- last
- outlast
- outlive
- prevail
- stand
- superannuate
- wear
- be left
- be long lived
- be timeless
- carry on
- carry through
- hang on
- have no end
- hold on
- hold out
- keep on
- never say die
- perdure
- run on
- stay on
- stick to
- wear on
- wear well
endure 的反义词 13 个
更多endure例句
- An essential conservative insight about everything is that nothing necessarily endures.
- The two endure a terrifying adventure where survival is never guaranteed.
- Since socializing in winter now requires us to endure frigid temperatures, at least in many parts of the country, a layer that won’t stay put just won’t do.
- More responsible leadership could have made an immense difference in the suffering and the death that America has endured.
- The reader must endure a slow start as various plotlines are established, but the pace quickens at the halfway mark.
- This is a degrading and shameful state which no man or woman should be forced to endure.
- But alas, a snub is yet another of the many indignities Valerie Cherish shall endure.
- Mary Soames is an exception to the rule that gilded offspring endure life rather than enjoy it.
- Some might lack the fortitude—or masochism—required to endure a grueling campaign (Rubio).
- “That was the first time I realized I would endure a lot of discrimination,” she says.
- But this alliance is rotten, and cannot endure; the Western men are no partizans of slavery.
- Who could suppose that two tolerably civilized nations would endure this in the middle of 1851?
- (b) All those who are under 20 and more than 50 years of age, and who are strong enough to endure the fatigue of a campaign.
- Though built upon the sand, they still endured, and would continue to endure.
- It is astonishing how much petting a big boy of ten can endure when he is quite sure that there is no one to laugh at him.