Tolero, toleras, pe. cor. tolerâre. Plaut.To suffet: to abide: to indure: to beare: to line ponrely and nighly: to nourish: to sustaine or maintaine hardly.Tecum bona malaque tolerabimus. Tere. Tolerare se. Corn. Nepos. To maintaine and fiade himselfe poorely and hardly.Alere & tolerare equitatum. Cæs. To finde and keepe. &c.Tolerare sua pecunia milites. Plini. To finde souldyours at his owne cost. Dura toserare Sen.Famem tolerate. Cæsa. To haue whereon to feede and ease their hunget.Famem sitimque tolerare, aliter, Vide FAMES.Fortunam rolerare. Brutus ad Cicer.Hiemem tolerare. Plin. To abide the hardnesse of winter.Impensas tolerare. Plin. To beare costes or charges.Inopiam obsidiumque tolerare. Tac. Laborem tolerare. Plin. To abide or indure labour.Laborem militarem tolerate. Ci. To indure the paines of warsart.Laborem studiorum pueri difficilius tolerant. Quint. Mala tolerate. Sen. Militiam colerare sub magistro. Virgil. To abide or indure the trauailes of warfare under a capitaine to serue in warte, &c.Passus centum sexaginta tolerare. Plin. To be able to run or go 160. pares. Patienter tolerare. Quint. Pondus alicuius tolerate. Hor. To sustaine the charge and waight of.Sitim tolerare. Plin. To abide thirss.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
tŏlĕro, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. (dep. collat. form tŏlĕror, āri, acc. to Prisc. p. 800 P.) [lengthened form of the root tol, whence tollo and tuli, kindr. with the Gr. *t*l*a*w], to bear, support, sustain (syn.: fero, patior, sustineo, sino). I.Lit. (rare and mostly post-class.): aquilae ipsae non tolerantes pondus apprehensum una merguntur, Plin. 10, 3, 3, 10; cf. id. 35, 14, 49, 173: aliquem sinu, App. M. 3, p. 132, 29: gremio suo, id. ib. 4, p. 154, 23: mensula cenae totius honestas reliquias tolerans, id. ib. 2, p. 121, 26.—II.Trop., to bear, endure, tolerate, sustain, support: militiam, Cic. Fam. 7, 18, 1: hiemem, id. Cat. 2, 10, 23; Hirt. B. G. 8, 5, 1: dicunt illi dolorem esse difficile toleratu, Cic. Fin. 4, 19, 52: sumptus et tributa civitatum ab omnibus tolerari aequabiliter, id. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 8, 25: acritudinem, Att. ap. Fest. p. 356; Ter. Hec. 3, 5, 28: facile labores pericula, dubias atque asperas res, Sall. C. 10, 2: aequo animo servitutem, id. J. 31, 11: cursus, Ov. M. 5, 610: vaporem, id. ib. 2, 301; cf.: vaporis vim, id. ib. 11, 630: tanta peditum equitatumque vis damnaque et injuriae aegre tolerabantur, Tac. H. 2, 56 fin.: sitim aestumque, id. G. 4.— Absol.: paulo longius tolerari posse, Caes. B. G. 7, 71: posse ipsam Liviam statuere, nubendum post Drusum an in penatibus isdem tolerandum haberet,
continue
,
remain
, Tac. A. 4, 40.—(b). With object-clause (poet. and in post - Aug. prose): ferro se caedi quam dictis his toleraret, Enn. ap. Fest. p. 356 Müll. (Ann. v. 137 Vahl.): qui perpeti medicinam toleraverant, Plin. 26, 1, 3, 3: magnitudinem mali perferre visu non toleravit, Tac. A. 3, 3 fin. — b. Of inanim. or abstr. subjects: Germania imbres tempestatesque tolerat, Plin. 14, 2, 4, 21; 35, 14, 49, 173: tolerat et annos metica (vitis), id. 14, 2, 4, 35.—III.Transf., to support a person or thing, i. e. to nourish, maintain, sustain, preserve by food, wealth, etc., = sustentare (v. h. v. II. B. 1.; so not in Cic.): his rationibus equitatum tolerare, Caes. B. C. 3, 58: octona milia equitum suā pecuniā, Plin. 33, 10, 47, 136: equos, Caes. B. C. 3, 49: corpora equorum, Tac. A. 2, 24; Col. 6, 24, 5: se fructibus agri, Dig. 50, 16, 203: semetipsos (pisces clausi), Col. 8, 17, 15: vitam, Caes. B. G. 7, 77; Tac. A. 15, 45 fin.; Verg. A. 8, 409: aevum, Lucr. 2, 1171: annos, Mart. 7, 64, 5: egestatem, Plaut. Trin. 2, 2, 57; so id. ib. 2, 2, 77: paupertatem, id. Rud. 4, 2, 14: famem, Caes. B. G. 1, 28: inopiam, Sall. C. 37, 7.—Absol.: ut toleret (sc. erum amantem servus), ne pessum abeat, Plaut. Aul. 4, 1, 12.—B.To keep, observe: silentium obnixum, App. M. 4, p. 147, 1.— Hence, A. tŏlĕrans, antis, P.a., bearing, supporting, enduring, tolerating, tolerant (post-Aug.; mostly with gen.): corpus laborum tolerans, Tac. A. 4, 1 fin.: piscium genera dulcis undae tolerantia, Col. 8, 16, 2. —Comp.: vacca frigoris tolerantior, Col. 6, 22, 2: bello tolerantior, Aur. Vict. Caes. 11. —Sup.: asellus plagarum et penuriae tolerantissimus, Col. 7, 1, 2.—Adv.: tŏlĕran-ter. 1.Patiently, enduringly, tolerantly: ferre aliquid, Cic. Fam. 4, 6, 2: pati dolorem, id. Tusc. 2, 18, 43.— 2. For tolerabiliter, bearably, tolerably: at nunc anniculae fecunditatem poscuntur, tolerantius tamen bimae,
moderately
, Plin. 8, 45, 70, 176.— B. tŏlĕrātus, a, um, P. a., supportable, tolerable: ut clementiam ac justitiam, quanto ignara barbaris, tanto toleratiora capesseret,
acceptable
, Tac. A. 12, 11. toles (tolles), ĭum, m. [Celtic], a wen on the neck, goitre, Veg. Vet. 1, 38; 3, 64; Ser. Samm. 16, 289; Marc. Emp. 15 med.; cf. Fest. p. 356 Müll.