live with
English
Verb
live with (third-person singular simple present lives with, present participle living with, simple past and past participle lived with)
- (idiomatic) To regard as adequate or manageable although not entirely satisfactory; to accept; to tolerate.
- 1954 July 16, "Smith Is Ready to Enter Negotiations at Geneva," Spokane Daily Chronicle, p. 2 (retrieved 23 July 2011):
- France's final terms for an Indochina settlement would be terms which the United States can live with.
- 2000 Nov. 6, Matt Rees, "Mideast Cease-Fire: 'Peres Is Not Very Hopeful'," Time:
- Israelis don't like the rioting and Molotov cocktails, but they can live with it.
- 2011 April 8, Neal P. McCluskey, "Business Success Is Easier," New York Times (retrieved 23 July 2011):
- In school systems, leaders have to live with collectivist ideals, which very often get in the way of meaningful and necessary change.
- 1954 July 16, "Smith Is Ready to Enter Negotiations at Geneva," Spokane Daily Chronicle, p. 2 (retrieved 23 July 2011):
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:tolerate
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