Abide | To wait; to pause; to delay. |
Abide | To stay; to continue in a place; to have one's abode; to
dwell; to sojourn; -- with with before a person, and commonly with at
or in before a place. |
Abide | To remain stable or fixed in some state or condition; to
continue; to remain. |
Abide | To wait for; to be prepared for; to await; to watch for;
as, I abide my time. |
Abide | To endure; to sustain; to submit to. |
Abide | To bear patiently; to tolerate; to put up with. |
Abide | To stand the consequences of; to answer for; to suffer
for. |
bide, stay, endure, put u, support, stand, stick out, brook, tolerate, suffer, stomach, digest, bear,
Thesaurus is a web service providing search capability for synonyms in different languages. Source: http://thesaurus.altervista.org/
Number of lists: 2
(verb) bide|stay|stay (generic term)|stay on (generic term)|continue (generic term)|remain (generic term)
(verb) digest|endure|stick out|stomach|bear|stand|tolerate|support|brook|suffer|put up|permit (generic term)|allow (generic term)|let (generic term)|countenance (generic term)
Antonyms:
Nothing antonyms found for term: abide
English explanatory dictionary
v. (past abided or rarely abode) 1 tr. (usu. in neg. or interrog.) tolerate, endure (can't abide him). 2 intr. (foll. by by) a act in accordance with (abide by the rules). b remain faithful to (a promise). 3 intr. archaic a remain, continue. b dwell. 4 tr. archaic sustain, endure. øøabidance n. [OE abidan (as A-(2), bidan BIDE)],
Use in sentenses
English |
Czech |
Merrian-Webster dictionary
Term |
Word class |
Description |
abide | verb | to continue in a place : SOJOURN |
Use phrase in quotation
Autor |
Citát |