0 past simple and past participle of countenance
But if such complacency cannot be countenanced, that returns us to our original problem.
Only that which serves the people may be countenanced.
Alternatively, when in everyday circumstances real motion does not fit the countenanced pattern, it will usually be perceived veridically.
What technologies are countenanced within the musical canons and the economies of the music industry?
Public preference for active discrimination or persecution of minority groups, for example, should not be countenanced.
The case clearly illustrates a rarely countenanced aspect of the ' distributional encounters ', but does so without identifying changing symbolic boundaries.
Evolution would have been countenanced long before, but for the opposition from landed and clerical interests who feared its deadly threat to the divine ordering of the world.
Should this sceptical scenario be countenanced, it would appear that realists go beyond their epistemic rights in inferring from a theory's success, to its probable truth or verisimilitude.