0 to suffer something difficult, unpleasant, or painful:
She's already had to endure three painful operations on her leg.
1 to continue to exist for a long time:
The political system established in 1400 endured until about 1650.
2 to experience and bear something difficult, painful, or unpleasant:
During the war many couples had to endure long periods of separation .
The family said they had endured years of torment and abuse at the hands of the neighbours.
Words alone cannot convey the untold misery endured by people in these refugee camps.
By the third month of the expedition they had endured many hardships, but worse was to follow.
The poem has enduring significance because of its comment on the "transhistorical" nature of oppressive institutions.
Sporting arenas were not the only noisy environments the partially deaf needed to endure, even churches could be noisy.
Everyone situated in a community of interests has an interest in that community existing and enduring.
中文繁体
經歷, 忍耐, 忍受…
More中文简体
经历, 忍耐, 忍受…
MoreEspañol
aguantar, superar, perdurar…
MorePortuguês
aguentar, suportar…
More日本語
耐える…
MoreTürk dili
tahammül etmek, dayanmak…
MoreFrançais
endurer, subir, durer…
MoreCatalan
aguantar, patir…
More