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506 Sentences With "tolerant of"

How to use tolerant of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tolerant of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tolerant of". Mastering all the usages of "tolerant of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They're tolerant of Muslims and other cultures here, great start, but be tolerant of other sexualities as well.
What you see here is that people on the moderate left really have become less tolerant of racists while growing more tolerant of all other groups.
It is important for, say, a baker to be tolerant of gay customers, but it's also important for others to be tolerant of the baker's genuine religious views, Kennedy suggested.
In a recent study published in The Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, scientists found that city acorn ants were more tolerant of heat, and less tolerant of cold, than their rural counterparts.
We don't have to be tolerant of other people's intolerance.
But Wall Street investors are less tolerant of big losses.
Americans are generally more tolerant of offensive speech than Europeans.
A palace less tolerant of authoritarianism would be an improvement.
The government appears more tolerant of company failures as well.
Second, we Americans are tolerant of one another, as individuals.
Many states have become less tolerant of poorly performing schools.
At the same time, try to be tolerant of mistakes.
Maybe ancient Egypt was more tolerant of refugees than Trump?
It makes people less tolerant of ambiguity, complexity, and uncertainty.
His experiment revealed that such larvae are tolerant of saline conditions.
But she said Britain had been far too tolerant of extremism.
And universities seem remarkably tolerant of student politics intruding on studies.
Global norms, once tolerant of coups, now treat them as taboo.
He is pro-Europe, tolerant of immigrants and critical of Russia.
Some of the animals are more tolerant of sharing space than others.
"We are not tolerant of racism and bigotry and xenophobia," she said.
Writers are much less tolerant of bad sentences strewn about a space.
Japan may be becoming more tolerant of those who are different, however.
"I'm not asking you to be tolerant of each other," he said.
Yet they seem more discontented and less tolerant of foreigners than ever.
And the other characters remain bizarrely tolerant of Sam's often misogynist behavior.
And it has had a toxic corporate culture tolerant of sexual harassment.
It is increasingly feminist and tolerant of immigration, and it upholds gay rights.
History suggests that over time more pluralist countries become more tolerant of immigration.
But females are generally much more tolerant of males during the breeding season.
They are also more tolerant of their owners'—sorry, butlers'—erratic working hours.
The rats became less tolerant of the toxins and began to lose weight.
After all, Trump himself has not been tolerant of dissenters at his rallies.
There are signs that South Koreans are becoming less tolerant of this approach.
Armed with this, we might become a little more tolerant of their situations.
The military is educating its soldiers to be tolerant of the L.G.B.T. community.
As the Dutchman who wants to be tolerant of other peoples and cultures?
Adapting to this ecosystem, bonobos may have become more tolerant of each other.
But there are signs the public might be growing more tolerant of violence.
Even today, some doctors believe that African-Americans are more tolerant of pain.
Post-crisis, both governments and markets have proved surprisingly tolerant of risky borrowing.
How tolerant of cold temperatures are the members of your immediate family, Sagittarius?
We're much less tolerant of that than we were even 220 years ago.
That just shows how cool and tolerant of a guy Ian MacKaye is.
Meanwhile, the other five ideological subcategories seem to have become more tolerant of everyone.
A free society should be tolerant of hearing dissenting perspectives in the public sphere.
Citizens now know much more about corruption and are much less tolerant of it.
British voters are no more tolerant of Muslims than most of their European peers.
Irving reckons women are simply less tolerant of men who look "basically a mess".
Authorities are increasing less tolerant of worker protests, said CLB's communications director, Geoffrey Crothall.
Innovation comes through trial and error, but society has grown less tolerant of risk.
And public investors have proved less tolerant of its losses than its private backers.
The speed at which most Americans have become tolerant of gay people is astonishing.
And I personally think we have to be tolerant of some uncertainty, some grayness.
"They're pretty tolerant of friends' imperfections and idiosyncrasies, more than young adults," she said.
One camp is relatively tolerant of contaminations, like racism, that might have affected sentencing.
But she proposed regulating cyberspace and said Britain had been far too tolerant of extremism.
We're already seeing a shift in executive leadership as businesses grow less tolerant of harassment.
Mexico is evolving into a country that's more tolerant of different sexual orientations, albeit slowly.
Conversely, might conservative Evangelicals become more compassionately tolerant of the diversity of the human condition?
I also worry that our societies are more brittle now and less tolerant of disruption.
She says they "are tolerant" of it, but she's had to figure out her regimen.
Others in New Zealand were less tolerant of what they perceived to be unequal treatment.
But by and large, Republicans have seemed more tolerant of infractions in their own ranks.
Liberals are more tolerant of mess, ambiguity, and uncertainty; conservatives prefer tidiness, clarity, and certainty.
In terms of higher temperatures, "research suggests we are less tolerant of other people," Clayton said.
We are not just tolerant of other ethnicities, races, religions and sexual orientations, we celebrate them.
Still, he is too tolerant of troublemaking by his nuke-brandishing ally, North Korea (see Schumpeter).
When The Economist interviewed him in July he adamantly argued that he is tolerant of criticism.
"The president became less tolerant of the West," a former advisor said on condition of anonymity.
The censors are also always more tolerant of criticism when it's not aimed at officials themselves.
Durant and Green appeared to be tolerant of each other, but the performance wasn't exactly inspiring.
"Everyone just assumed that prairie dogs are tolerant of people since they're found nearby," Shannon says.
"We've become less tolerant of alternative viewpoints as media has become more polarized," Professor Skewes said.
As a researcher, being tolerant of opinions different from one's own is the most important thing.
Most workers in the survey said they wish their organizations were less tolerant of toxic employees.
He added that those who tout tolerance are often the least tolerant of traditional Christian values.
One reason this franchise is more tolerant of so-called distraction is that it's used to it.
Other species of ants tend to be more territorial and less tolerant of ants from other nests.
Trustbusters have not looked too closely at vertical deals—and America's courts have been tolerant of them.
That said, American companies also have many Chinese employees, who may be more tolerant of state meddling.
People are more tolerant of software, even if it's awful, hence Apple Mail continues to be terrible.
Even in Thailand, supposedly tolerant of cross-dressing men, vagrancy laws are used to harass trans women.
One analyst suggested that, as society becomes more tolerant of L.G.B.T. people, some opponents become more radical.
Great care must be taken to avoid nerves and tender areas that are not tolerant of pressure.
"To be accepting and tolerant of each other, you have to be a mixture," Ms. Cheng said.
"The Chinese are more tolerant of pain because we have been poor for so long," he said.
For instance, we discovered that Nellie has an adaptation that makes her more tolerant of high altitudes. 
China, which until 1997 considered homosexuality a crime, has grown more tolerant of gay and lesbian people.
Generally, Chinese are more receptive to new things and more tolerant of imperfect products, including mobile apps.
Pets who are less territorial may be more tolerant of a new animal, though that's no guarantee.
In many communities, this reinforces commonly held gender biases that women are subservient and tolerant of poor treatment.
"It just sounds like you're asking us to be tolerant of intolerance," one Rockette reportedly said to Dolan.
"None of us can be tolerant of organizations or individuals who value access to alcohol above student welfare."
The resulting ambiguity has led Tata to be too tolerant of weak businesses and to a complicated succession.
They are more tolerant of hagglers and are resorting to gimmicks, including Black Friday discounts, to boost sales.
We need to be more open and more tolerant of differences, even on issues we care about deeply.
For one thing, he said, shareholders would no longer be tolerant of enormous pay packages for corporate chiefs.
Readers would have been more skeptical about Alexievich's shocking stories and less tolerant of her lack of nuance.
Let's be more polite to each other, more tolerant of people who think differently than we do. Fine.
Native to the semiarid regions of Eastern Africa, they are also very tolerant of long periods of drought.
Perhaps the High Septon was corrupt, or perhaps he was only human and tolerant of other human frailties.
Rising interest rates in the United States and in Europe have made investors less tolerant of emerging markets.
It's somewhat of an upscale restaurant, but they are super tolerant of kids dropping food and making noise.
"People are far more tolerant of bad roads in urban settings, because speeds are lower," Mr. Engstrom said.
For 20 of the hazards, white men were statistically far more tolerant of risk than any other group.
The stock market has become more tolerant of rising bond yields, which contributed to its violent sell-off.
The French youth, which are generally more tolerant of diversity, end up looking more radical than they are.
"In avoiding [peanuts], we've probably caused more people to not be tolerant of the food," she told me.
While Ghandi certainly wants to spread his own faith throughout the world, he is tolerant of other religious beliefs.
In particular, some are measurably bolder and more tolerant of potential threats, such as nearby human beings, than others.
But of the groups studied, people of no religious affiliation were the most tolerant of other beliefs and cultures.
More than many Republicans, Trump has seemed tolerant of gay people, perhaps because of his cosmopolitan New York roots.
The UAE is more tolerant of different religions than some of its neighbors in the Gulf, particularly Saudi Arabia.
Despite the BS they preach, the left isn't tolerant of any view that differs even slightly from their own.
I chose DigitalOcean because the company has been consistently tolerant of people running Tor middle relays on its infrastructure.
But even in an office that is tolerant of youthful boundary pushing, some millennial behavior can cross the line.
Historians say India was relatively tolerant of gay and transgender people before the British introduced more restrictive social mores.
"We should be more tolerant of people who post 'untruthful information' that aren't malicious," he said in a post.
These voters have become attracted to, or at least tolerant of, a politics tinged with ethno-nationalism and authoritarianism.
"Their literacy in financial matters means that they are more tolerant of taking investment-related risks," Stanley Fallaw wrote.
Corbyn is wrestling with accusations that his party has been tolerant of anti-Semitism among some of its members.
One recent Pew study found young Evangelical Christians were more likely to be tolerant of same-sex marriage, for instance.
How can we be tolerant of those who see things differently, yet find the common threads that bind us together?
Banks were more tolerant of drawn-out proceedings because they wanted to reorganize companies so they could take on loans.
Greek society is tolerant of personal idiosyncrasy but intolerant of perceived hypocrisy, even though both words have equally Hellenic roots.
Hopefully, Kim will be more tolerant of holiday season copycatting if it comes from someone outside of her immediate family.
In addition, traders suspect Washington will be less tolerant of a cheaper yen given the U.S. presidential election in November.
It also showed the financial crisis has left many countries less tolerant of immigrants and that corruption remained relatively high.
Governments hungry for revenue to shrink their deficits have become less tolerant of individuals and corporations that minimise their taxes.
Willnot may have no use for conformity, but it's surprisingly tolerant of rebels, radicals, conspiracy theorists and plain old oddballs.
Advocates said that the crackdown on the young communists showed that the government was becoming even less tolerant of criticism.
"The international community has been too tolerant of Iran's bad behavior," said Michael T. Flynn, the president's national security adviser.
With their deep roots and tough, gnarly branches, pistachio trees are hardy, tolerant of salty soils and brutal heat waves.
People potentially can reduce their prejudice by training themselves to be more tolerant of broken patterns in the physical world.
Each year they seem to grow in numbers at CPAC: young conservatives who are more tolerant of differing social views.
But while the voters have kept their famed tolerance for personal failings, they have become much less tolerant of politicians.
We take issue, however, with the suggestion that Ms. DeVos is "tolerant" of and even a supporter of L.G.B.T. people.
"He's grown a lot during the intervening years and has been largely playful and tolerant of other bears," noted Fitz.
Unless the US starts getting much more tolerant of immigration much more quickly, that's not really something we can replicate.
Clinton's approach, while arguably more effective at reducing systemic risk, is more nuanced and technocratic, and more tolerant of large institutions.
But the ones I've done artificial insemination with by myself and without physical restraint, they're much more tolerant of other people.
And as my volleys of verbal abuse against Siri the other day proved, the product is still disturbingly tolerant of insults.
But since that dark period, Salem has come to nurture a culture that is rather inclusive and tolerant of fringe religions.
Philadelphia by reputation is not the most tolerant of towns, though mostly relative to the ups and downs of the Eagles.
The party said hopes were fading that the government might become more tolerant of dissent than the one it had replaced.
Although tolerant of religious minorities, he withholds political freedoms from the Muslim majority, particularly Islamists, who he fears might overthrow him.
At a time of economic crisis, the move provoked heavy ire in a country decreasingly tolerant of its frequent political scandals.
The average consumer is growing more and more comfortable with shopping online, and less and less tolerant of slow shipping times.
Better education and a more civil society should help people become more tolerant of one another, and also of their differences.
Some Austen experts, while critical of Kelly's methods, have been amusedly tolerant of what John Mullan calls her "divertingly unlikely" discoveries.
Families, a report noted, seem less tolerant of absences when soldiers are sent to patrol Paris rather than on missions abroad.
This shows that most rowers do not injure their lower back and that the spine is very tolerant of this activity.
Indeed, future Congress is more likely to be tolerant of a well-targeted and effective subsidy, than a costlier sprawling one.
If you're not tolerant of that oddness, you're trying to form something into your idea of what things should be like.
Dr. Belyaev recognized that fur farmers would have chosen animals that were at least somewhat tolerant of people, Dr. Kukekova said.
However, in the current context, I think the MPC will be more tolerant of fiscal slippage and continue with accommodative cycle.
Although most moderates do not support violence they have been so far unexpectedly tolerant of actions such as the Legco break-in.
Perhaps female and minority viewers were once more tolerant of films that offered only caricatures of themselves, or omitted their likenesses altogether.
But more recently Mr Blankfein may have been too tolerant of the trading division, where he and several lieutenants made their names.
It's no worse than any others of that kind on the market, but I'm growing less tolerant of that design these days.
Mitchell, initially tolerant of Gould's erratic behavior, becomes increasingly frustrated as various attempts to get the Oral History published come to naught.
But there is one fascinating exception to PRRI's trend: Religiously-unaffiliated Americans have actually become less tolerant of politicians they deem immoral.
Thais are growing less tolerant of the daily slaughter, some of which does graphic rounds of the internet thanks to dashboard cameras.
I have some weird vague sense that we used to be less tolerant of people lying to us, blatantly, to our faces.
" Richard Gelfond, the chief executive of IMAX, said: "I used to be a little more tolerant of what others say in email.
Four in 10 Democratic men said they felt less tolerant of sexism in their own lives as a result of the hearings.
When people feel anxious, they're less open to diverse ideas and opinions, and less forgiving and tolerant of those they disagree with.
Older adults may also be more forgiving of themselves than they once were — and more tolerant of a wrong note (or six).
Millennials are considered the most racially diverse generation in American history and are generally more tolerant of racial differences than their predecessors.
Trump and other members of his administration have criticized past presidents, including Clinton, for being too tolerant of North Korea&aposs nuclear ambitions.
A lame-duck Merkel – or her successor – may be less tolerant of countries, such as Italy, who flout the European Union's budget rules.
He desperately wanted the politics of his time to work better: to be less cruel, less arbitrary and more tolerant of human difference.
Demand equality, encourage peace within all communities, and be tolerant of others in the grim face of fascism that's staring into our eyes.
Researchers at the Harris Poll found that older respondents are less tolerant of visible tattoos as the prestige of the job position rises.
It's easy to find anecdotal evidence that America has grown more reactive, coarser, and less tolerant of outsiders since the 20153 presidential election.
Psychology research from Georgia Tech also showed that those with high curiosity are more tolerant of ambiguity, which requires a sophisticated thinking style.
The bank, under the leadership of Alexandre Tombini since 2011, has been under fire for years for being too tolerant of high inflation.
So while we may tease someone who uses a funny pronunciation of a word, most of us are tolerant of people with accents.
Maybe I could be a little more tolerant of their comments if I didn't have cancer, in addition to two other autoimmune issues.
Supporting Trump requires daily acts of moral distancing, a process that means that after a few months you are tolerant of any corruption.
In a separate interview, the elder Ms. Kavakci said that Wednesday's decision simply made Turkey more tolerant of religion, rather than less secular.
But more recent polls suggest that white evangelicals overwhelmingly support Trump, and that they have grown more tolerant of politicians who behave badly.
They require 24-hour-a-day involvement with humans for many weeks when they are puppies to become more tolerant of human beings.
TO BE HIRED as Santa Claus at Boscov's, a department store in Pennsylvania, you will need to "be tolerant of unexpected behaviours from children".
Wang said there had also been a big improvement in the work ethic of Shanxi officials who were once too tolerant of bad behavior.
There's also only very weak scientific evidence that opioids can effectively treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of the drug's effects.
So if prices come down, users might be more tolerant of needing to wiggle their smart whatnot to get it to work as billed.
They all stemmed from a GOP political culture that is far more tolerant of corruption than national Democrats have been in the modern era.
Both men were inducted in 1942 and, in 1943, they joined the Navy hospital corps, which was known to be more tolerant of gays.
Although Chinese society is becoming more tolerant of diversity, even at the top, the state worries that such groups are becoming increasingly well organised.
ScienceTake Dogs have evolved to be friendly and tolerant of humans and one another, which might suggest they would be good at cooperative tasks.
It could hypothetically become more tolerant of liberal views among its players and start treating problems like domestic violence with the gravity they deserve.
They also have often been more tolerant of losses by tech companies, particularly younger ones, than they have of red ink from other firms.
Vincent helps Ray with the house he is trying to sell, and Ray becomes, at least briefly, a little more tolerant of Vincent's showmanship.
"Markets get a sense that the authorities are tolerant of a weaker rupee, with little by way of jawboning or verbal intervention," Rao added.
Perhaps it is the case that citizens are more tolerant of democracy's limitations — and thus inoculated from populist appeals — when their expectations are low.
In a more "risk-on" market environment (as with the IPO markets in 2012 and 2013), investors may be tolerant of longer runways to profitability.
Public opinion has in recent years grown less tolerant of leniency extended to the heads of conglomerates, or chaebols, for the sake of the economy.
They are not unlike the stereotype of the fierce mother — tolerant of her son's faults, self-effacing and willing to do anything to protect him.
" Less agreeable people were more likely to notice grammar errors, which the researchers mused was because these types "are less tolerant of deviations from convention.
He was far less tolerant of the Ndebele, a minority ethnic group who continued to back his long-standing rival for national leadership, Joshua Nkomo.
People tend to be more supportive, patient, and tolerant of each other, even when they find some behavior of their partner's annoying, Dr. Skurtu says.
Kaufman says the ability to call phone numbers is in the roadmap, which could make Portal more tolerant of people who don't live on Messenger.
Mr Damore's broad argument, that the Valley is fairly tolerant of racial and gender diversity but intolerant of diversity of opinion, was his most powerful.
Pinterest, interestingly, seems to have been a little more tolerant of making what might seem like small design changes but may have substantial user implications.
Germany, as one of those with most to lose from a sudden dislocation of trade, has been one of those most tolerant of Britain's turmoil.
In fact, Americans—particularly whites and Hispanics—are generally quite hostile to public protest, although they are more tolerant of nonviolent protests than violent ones.
Most of the genetically modified crops contain genes from bacteria that make the crops resistant to certain insects or tolerant of Roundup or other herbicides.
Cambodians may not have any outlet for displeasure with the regime, but that does not mean they are blind to, or tolerant of, its faults.
Our survey found that only 25 percent of entry-level employees think their organization is tolerant of failure (compared with 44 percent of senior executives).
"I think we've inappropriately written off this new generation, as though somehow they were tolerant of all the harms that information can cause," he said.
The Chinese juniper and the eastern red cedar, two evergreen conifers, are highly tolerant of aerosols and high wind, so they are planted along shorelines.
Why it matters: The island had been more tolerant of homosexuals than many Caribbean countries, but no laws currently exist that grant them equal rights.
Some animals may be tolerant of organisms to which we have not previously been exposed, and to which we do not have protective immune responses.
In the United States, most voters are growing more tolerant of immigration, but a committed minority is increasingly demanding limits on immigration in all forms.
During negotiations, studies have found that men are considerably more likely to lie than women — and men are more tolerant of lying as a strategy.
The rebooted guerrillas are likely to spend much time in Venezuela, where the Maduro government has been tolerant of, even aligned with, Colombia's leftist bands.
So when I'm not reading my seed catalogs for the articles, so to speak, I comb the pages for plants tolerant of aridity and heat.
The Maduro administration has insisted that it intends to continue to make payments on its debts, and investors have been largely tolerant of payment delays.
But as Venezuela is making efforts to pay, bondholders of some of the world's highest yielding debt have so far been tolerant of the delays.
The yellow fever mosquito competes with a cousin, the Asian tiger mosquito, that has also colonized the United States, and is more tolerant of cold weather.
But he also thought the state of Colorado, which said the baker had to make cakes for everyone, should be more tolerant of his religious freedom.
Of course, A2 milk proponents claim that many of these people are tolerant of lactose and don't need to avoid all milk, just A1-containing milk.
Users decried this as being needlessly tolerant of a section of the site many see as toxic and filled with multiple offenders of the site's rules.
Mr Ghani is less tolerant of corruption than was his predecessor, Hamid Karzai, and appears to have cleaned up customs and government procurement a fair bit.
The U.S. Cobalt acquisition was needed, Santaguida said, to get to a size to attract bigger investors, tolerant of the spending levels necessary to accelerate production.
Daniel Raymond, deputy director of planning and policy at the Harm Reduction Coalition, took issue with Sessions' premise that society is more tolerant of drug use.
In Twitter's case, in particular, it's been called out for being too tolerant of online harassment and hate speech, under the guise of protecting free speech.
"We're much less tolerant of that now than we were, even ten years ago," Hammerling recalled on the latest episode of Recode Media with Peter Kafka.
Under President Obama, the military was required to be more tolerant of gender and sexual minorities, following the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" in 2010.
Even some key members of Trumps's own party, who have been so tolerant of his bigotry and poor handle on policy, feel emboldened to criticize him.
The Malaysian public are an unusually pragmatic electorate -- they are hugely tolerant of political tomfoolery, as long as it doesn't interfere too much with daily life.
"The Conservative Party that I have served has always had room for a wide range of opinions and has been tolerant of measured dissent," Hammond said.
They also tend to be more tolerant of losses for tech companies, especially if they're growing quickly and can promise a big payoff down the road.
Uber Chief Executive Dara Khosrowshahi has since his August appointment tried to improve the company's image, including by stamping out its reputation as tolerant of chauvinism.
Antitrust approval has become an interesting question in the Trump administration, which bankers and lawyers had thought would be more tolerant of consolidation than its predecessor.
The American Addiction Centers website said that regular ketamine users can become tolerant of the drug and develop memory problems, brain fog, mood swings, and flashbacks.
But unlike "America's finest city" to the north, Zona Norte is very tolerant of prostitution and drugs (and pretty well-known worldwide for this same reason).
As the prime minister had been jailed himself for four months after reciting a subversive poem, the hope was that Turkey would become more tolerant of dissent.
Indeed, even though millennials are the most racially diverse generation in American history, and generally more tolerant of racial differences than their predecessors (ahem, Clint), racism continues.
But consumers in the West may hesitate to use self-driving cars that have been trained in a laxer safety environment that is more tolerant of accidents.
We might also remember that Dick Cheney and other "serious conservatives" defended our support of apartheid South Africa, and Reagan was pretty tolerant of dictators like Pinochet.
Allison Harell of the University of Quebec found that voters are more tolerant of immigration if they feel that their country is in control of its borders.
More than a third of women said they are feeling less tolerant of sexism in their own lives as a result of Trump's victory, the polling said.
In the 1970s, he had what he called a "conversion experience," which he said made him a more committed Christian and more tolerant of other people's opinions.
Clinton also has deep roots among relatively affluent, professional Democratic voters, who tend to support the trans-Pacific Partnership and are largely tolerant of the business sector.
Maybe the #MeToo movement isn't going to rid the world of all predators, but it certainly seems to be making the world less tolerant of misogynistic behavior.
The ayatollah urged restraint even if students "set my picture on fire or tear it," a remarkable directive from a government not normally tolerant of political dissent.
In rereading my diary this time, I became more tolerant of my youthful writing and allowed myself to remember the sadness and the loneliness that motivated it.
Equity investors appear to exempt some companies or industries from expectations of foreseeable profitability, but debt investors and lenders are generally less tolerant of cash-burning businesses.
They are less generous today, in part because of frustration with a Lebanese government seen as too tolerant of Hizbullah, the Iranian-backed militia and political party.
Note further that while North Korean leadership may be highly tolerant of casualties (on the part of others, that is), it most assuredly is not suicidal itself.
Lisa, he said, was largely tolerant of his views, but drew the line at gambling their children's futures on the fanciful notion of some imminent technological intervention.
Doctors have tried feeding patients minuscule amounts of peanuts to gradually retrain their immune systems to become tolerant of the food, but the treatment doesn't always work.
The former first lady argued Tuesday that there are key differences for today's youth, saying young people are "less tolerant of obvious inequities" than in the past.
Would the man who made "My Beautiful Laundrette" (1985), "The Grifters" (1990), and two foul-tongued Roddy Doyle adaptations have been quite so tolerant of Florence's fancies?
Deutsche Bank, which was eager to gain a foothold in the lucrative American market and more tolerant of risk than many of its rivals, filled the void.
Many have pointed out that YouTube, Facebook, and others have been largely tolerant of Jones, citing immovable moderation policies as the reason for leaving his channels be.
In order to survive, I'm forced to be more tolerant of those privileged within both of my communities — even when they often harbor misplaced animosity toward me.
Both incidents illustrate why sometimes it makes sense to be tolerant of opposing views, and other times it is imperative to separate yourself from potentially soul-sapping relationships.
It affects their overall political outlook and makes them less tolerant of diversity, more hostile to programs designed to alleviate historical and structural discrimination and stuff like that.
In an interview with a male attorney, Bland allegedly joked the man's wife must be tolerant of his sexual needs, given the number of children the couple had.
They're targeted at neurotypical kids, and designed to encourage them to change, by becoming more tolerant of kids who might hang out and play differently than they do.
She certainly picked the right moment to attempt to begin to use her powerful voice, but we as a culture are not particularly tolerant of hypocrisy or insincerity.
In other words, I accept Google Assistant might not yet know how to interpret my question and answer it, but I am less tolerant of a wrong answer.
"It is the religiously conservative who are more tolerant of Kavanaugh possibly committing sexual assault and would still be willing to have him on the Court," Burden said.
Lenovo imagines the product will work best for super mobile business types, road warriors, and most importantly, tech enthusiasts who may be more tolerant of first-gen awkwardness.
In Brazil the faithful seem tolerant of pastors who are light-fingered with their tithes; many see giving as a virtuous act, regardless of the money's ultimate destination.
The government appears to have become more tolerant of and even responsive to online activity since Miguel Diaz-Canel last April replaced Raul Castro as president last April.
Even those whom Mr Sardo describes as "more tolerant of human weakness and less hypocritical about the relationship between sex and politics" were indignant about Mr Berlusconi's affairs.
While those spectacles drew their share of press attention and loose talk, today's corporate, almost bloodless entertainment industry seems less tolerant of executives who depart from the script.
Growing up in Mississippi shaped my life in all sorts of ways, including seeing a Bible Belt, cultural Christianity that was often very tolerant of racism and bigotry.
Then invite them to read the short responses from six experts in this November 2015 Room for Debate forum, When a Generation Becomes Less Tolerant of Free Speech.
After entering the race, Morganelli appeared to delete tweets where he complimented Trump and called progressives "the least tolerant of anyone who disagrees with them," according to CNN.
Most people, however, would rather spare pedestrians over passengers, as well as lawful people over jaywalkers—except in poorer countries, where drivers are generally more tolerant of jaywalking.
Charter schools, in general, are known for having stricter discipline than traditional public schools and for being less tolerant of families whose children are chronically late or absent.
There has always been a stigma with Chinese people in Vietnam, and I think the culture here has normalized and taught Asians to be tolerant of this behavior.
He is still allowed to teach foreign legal history and comparative law at Peking University, which he said is more tolerant of mavericks than many other Chinese campuses.
She told Business Insider the popularity of the spreadsheets reflected a generational divide, as young industry professionals are less tolerant of "old behaviors" than their older counterparts are.
When people have direct contact with members of a particular ethnic or national group, studies find, they tend to become more tolerant of the group as a whole.
In Turkey, where the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has become increasingly authoritarian and tolerant of corruption, Bharara has been hailed as a hero on social media.
People who urge a more proportionate, incremental and individualized response to complex problems are tarred as being some percentage — usually 100 — tolerant of the menaces that trouble us.
But it makes us much more tolerant of not correcting these major problems that have played a huge role in driving shark populations way down across the planet.
They're going to Tesla and SpaceX staff, who are likely to be more tolerant of any early manufacturing bugs and can easily bring their new rides in for inspection.
Kasich, who was far more tolerant of Trump on the campaign trail than were his other GOP rivals, wondered what his daughters would say should he now support him.
Because it's so potent, fentanyl is typically reserved for patients who are tolerant of opioids and have severe flashes of pain that overwhelm more standard opioids already being taken.
White commuters who had been on a train with Latinos grew less tolerant of immigration than they had been before, or than passengers who took the very next train.
Employers would be less tolerant of bad behaviour if they were required to disclose to investors how many settlements they reached and if they continued to employ repeat offenders.
Recently, Trump proposed an ideology test on new immigrants that would require those coming into the United States to show they are, among other things, tolerant of LGBTQ people.
Steve King says racist things because he's a racist, and because he knows he's unlikely to face repercussions under a Republican Party that is now openly tolerant of racism.
Although Belarus still has the death penalty and harasses the opposition, Mr Lukashenko has become more tolerant of civil society, even allowing a measure of public criticism and debate.
"The beach species is exceptionally tolerant of salt, because it evolved on sand dunes," Stewart said—a compelling quality, because drought and fertilizers cause salts to accumulate in soil.
" Ms. Sabouni's book asks how Syria's cosmopolitan cities — more or less tolerant of sectarian differences for generations — could have collapsed into what she calls "a nightmare of animal carnage.
Voters will be less tolerant of misconduct from their elected representatives, and they've witnessed how both Democrats and Republicans in Congress have handled this issue over the last year.
Our country has made progress on many issues of social bias, and younger generations tend to be more open-minded and tolerant of different groups than older generations are.
On Friday, however, Ker Gibbs, the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, sounded more favorably inclined toward the Trump administration's policies and less tolerant of Beijing's.
"I always knew there was a chance they would go off the deep end, but I was really hoping they would be more tolerant of my decision," she said.
That said, we should all be more tolerant of each other and empathetic of the fact that we all have so many digital demands on our time these days.
Following the third militant attack in Britain in less than three months, May said Thursday's election would go ahead and that Britain had been far too tolerant of extremism.
Some people withstand jet lag better than others — possibly because they may be more sensitive to light, they're simply better at falling asleep, or they're just more tolerant of discomfort.
"Our industry has become tolerant of a 'brilliant jerks' culture," said Cowboy Ventures partner Aileen Lee, who attributed the comebacks in part to tech's idolization of flawed but brilliant executives.
This response, which is part of a process called habituation, can result in individual bears becoming more tolerant of people, if they take risks being around people without negative consequences.
A spate of scandals in Europe suggest that prosecutors, as well as the politicians who influence how much freedom judicial investigators enjoy, are becoming ever less tolerant of corporate corruption.
In recent months, one observer noted, Iran's rulers have been relatively tolerant of strikes and protests by workers; Mr Trump's move could give them a perfect excuse to crack down.
"We know that people become more mentally flexible with age, are more tolerant of other people, and thrive better emotionally themselves," study author Dion Sommer said in a press release.
Under Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Hungary has become more tolerant of anti-Semitism, and Ms. Shaul said the foundation had seen an increase in episodes targeting survivors across the country.
Companies more consumed with secrecy — Facebook, for instance, or Amazon or Apple — may be less tolerant of a large number of employees who use their tech skills to go rogue.
Instead, she was tough, stubborn, gainfully employed and — like most of the women in these movies, by that point — counterproductively heartless, tolerant of whatever partnership the plot backed her into.
Unlike most of Europe, the Czech Republic had remained tolerant of smoking until now — and it was up to restaurant owners to decide whether to allow it in their establishments.
Well, in his book "The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth," Benjamin Friedman argues that in prosperous times voters are more tolerant of diversity, more committed to fairness and expanding opportunity.
And the underappreciated moderation of most Democratic voters made them relatively tolerant of Mr Biden's platitudes when the main alternative was the excessive miserabilism of Mr Sanders and Ms Warren.
Using a 26-item self-report questionnaire that included statements like, "I'm tolerant of my own flaws and inadequacies," Dr. Neff and her colleagues rated subjects' level of self-compassion.
The Europeans have also been too tolerant of Sudan's behavior in Darfur; several countries — including Sweden, France and Germany — have permitted business and commercial ties with Khartoum in spite of atrocities.
The new wording may indicate that Beijing will be more tolerant of yuan exchange rate moves against the dollar and gradually reduce its intervention in the foreign exchange market this year.
Why it matters: These technological changes mark an end to the psychology of oil scarcity that made Western democracies more tolerant of erratic actions by OPEC and other oil-producing states.
Sana Yasir, an intersex educator and physician, said Pakistan was becoming more tolerant of transgender people but acceptance was not yet widespread with many people confusing gender identity with sexual orientation.
In many states, family court judges are elected by direct vote; that means people can ensure those on the bench are tolerant of alternative lifestyles when they go to the polls.
Within the Fed, governors and regional presidents are sometimes at odds over interest rate policy and some academics have argued governors tend to be more tolerant of inflation than regional presidents.
So, it is sensible to assume that there are as many benefits to being less tolerant of men's masculine humor as there are to being more accepting of women's feminine humor.
"I do believe some progressives who believe that they want everyone to be tolerant of some things are very intolerant of other people's opinions, so I do believe that," he said.
But jokes are not harmless: studies provide some evidence that hearing sexist jokes does make men more tolerant of rape, which 5 to 10 percent of college men admit to committing.
Even if this signals Chinese policymakers are more tolerant of companies being pushed into bankruptcy, analysts say it also suggests they are moving slowly so as not to destabilize the economy.
The attitude at the time was that black bodies were more tolerant of pain and hard labor, and experts of the time invoked or invented biological explanations to explain disease disparities.
The goal of any DBT treatment is to find a balance between acceptance and change strategies; to be tolerant of one's current state and emotions while still striving towards personal growth.
Yet Europe may be even less tolerant of aggressive tax practices when the UK has left: it recently clamped down on the so-called "patent box" introduced by the last government.
Patrick Poon, a researcher at Amnesty International in Hong Kong, said the crackdown would provide "another bad image" for China's leaders, noting that they once seemed more tolerant of labor activism.
I'd say we no longer gather in coliseums to watch people get eaten by lions because clergy members, philosophers and artists have made us less tolerant of cruelty, not more tolerant.
But we can only survive and thrive as Nation if we are mutually tolerant of each other's differences – whether they be differences based on race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or political thinking.
But it also makes sense as a kind of redemption arc for Isabella, who has gone from someone who rejoices in her brother's impending death to someone more tolerant of human frailty.
"Just as we become more accepting of people in terms of their sexual orientation, or we become more racially tolerant, we're becoming more tolerant of people's different bodies, as well," she says.
For example, helping farmers in coastal areas shift to crops that are more tolerant of drought or salty floodwater might not work longer term if their land is submerged entirely, she said.
The country was briefly occupied by the Persians and the Portuguese but otherwise has mostly remained peaceful, thanks in part to its embrace of Ibadi Islam, which is tolerant of other religions.
This aircraft type is more tolerant of extreme cold than other more modern aircraft, and two of them had to be flown all the way down from Calgary for the rescue flight.
And it would befit the measures of both men if Trump fired him for being insufficiently tolerant of Nazis, after Cohn passed up his chance to be remembered for standing on principle.
In this age of polarization, one might add that they should be open-minded, tolerant of other viewpoints and ready to compromise their own views for the sake of a democratic consensus.
A staffer who was tolerant of my inquiries encouraged me to have fun, so I engaged in some motorcycle-chic cosplay, from midcentury cosmonaut (Biltwell, $200) to hunger-game futurist (Blauer, $425).
At the margin, down-scaled expectations on tax/regulatory reform would make investors a bit less tolerant of perceived hawkishness by Yellen, even as the inflation-revival story gets a bit louder globally.
But even if Americans are more tolerant of gay Americans than voters think they are, more are prejudiced against gay Americans than they were against black Americans in 2007 or women in 2014.
These teenagers are also more likely to avoid online advertising, and are less tolerant of it than older generations, as they skip ads three seconds earlier than Gen X (aged 35 to 49).
A few years ago it looked as if the United States — long more tolerant of immigration, with a more fluid sense of national identity that readily allowed for hyphenation — could avoid this turn.
Mr Macri has been less tolerant of protests that block roads than his predecessors were, and during his term prosecutors have detained Milagro Sala, an indigenous activist, on charges of embezzling public funds.
In Denmark, organisations like Huset are needed more than ever, both Amonsen and Holstein said, because Danish society has become more competitive and less tolerant of anyone perceived as not pulling their weight.
Larger firms, in particular, which you can think of as wildly successful businesses and thus embodiments of the logic of business, tend to be more tolerant of employee personal tastes than smaller firms.
But that appears unlikely in the short-term because investors have broadly been tolerant of payment delays and even some default announcements as Venezuela insists it will continue servicing the hugely profitable bonds.
Twitter's definition of non-consensual nudity will be expanded to include "upskirt imagery, 'creep shots,' and hidden camera content" and Twitter will become less tolerant of pornography that mimics these kinds of images.
Hochschild notes that the people she spoke to in Louisiana emphasized what they believed to be a fundamental contradiction in liberalism: It was tolerant of everything but their views, which it called intolerant.
There is also some evidence that a low-carb diet like keto could lead people to become less tolerant of glucose and develop diabetes, though there is still little research on this link.
He also said voters are picking "their news to validate what they believe, and it makes them increasingly less tolerant of other people's views that rely on another set of facts," he said.
The thinking here goes that once the going gets tough, the Americans get going and, in a real crisis, the Japanese public will be more tolerant of highly sensitive weapons in their midst.
But just as in the United States, where Ms. Trump has drawn criticism for echoing her husband and cribbing lines from Michelle Obama, Ljubljana sometimes seems less than tolerant of its former citizen.
It's all pretty easy money, and just as Skylines is forgiving of disastrous traffic snarls and broken city services, its new industries seem completely tolerant of inefficiency—to point of feeling failure-proof.
Compared to an archetypal religious conservative like Ted Cruz, the casino strip club owner with cameo credits in Playboy soft-core films stood out as fairly tolerant of the pleasures of the flesh.
Its left-wing opposition, to which Haaretz gives voice, has become synonymous with needless antagonism; public debate has been made blunter and less constructive; the public is angrier and less tolerant of dissent.
If you are open to new experiences, patient with occasional power outages, tolerant of cultural norms different from yours, and like the energy that a vibrant town can bring, I strongly recommend León.
The laws of war are much more tolerant of government secrecy and coercion, censorship, surveillance, and detention than ordinary law, which is much more focused on individual life and on restraining government power.
The company has been tolerant of private stock sales to an unusual degree, meaning that Tuesday is not the release valve for shareholders who long felt shackled — that's expected to temper the sell-off.
But it turned out that early adopters needed to make the iPhone a hit were (often grudgingly) tolerant of AT&T's sometimes spotty service, paving the way for additional iPhone users in subsequent years.
"The funny thing is that all French presidents, whether they are from the right, the left, or, as right now, the centre, they have always been very tolerant of the regime," says Ms Nabourema.
Gaslighters will often rightly assume that if you allude to the things in this list, you are more likely both to get hooked on them and to be more tolerant of their bad behavior.
In his year at the helm, Khosrowshahi has tried to improve Uber's image, including by addressing federal criminal and civil probes into its business practices and stamping out its reputation as tolerant of chauvinism.
The GOP isn't inherently unhip; it's just refused to modify its positions as the younger generation—which tends to be racially diverse, tolerant of homosexuality, down to smoke some weed—has come of age.
The French have been remarkably tolerant of the constraints imposed by the state of emergency, even though few of the 2,700 police raids carried out so far have uncovered evidence that might thwart terrorists.
Widely viewed as a consensus builder, Powell is expected to be more tolerant of a stronger growth profile and more rapid inflation relative to Chair Yellen, who has consistently targeted a "moderate" growth rate.
Fantasy played a central role in the Leave campaign, of course, and as the years since the 2016 referendum have dragged on, the country has become ever more tolerant of it from all sides.
But Mr. Sarabadani, who left Tehran for Berlin two years ago, said he thought his work as an administrator on Persian-language Wikipedia had made the community of editors there less tolerant of abuse.
Meanwhile, Wall Street has become less tolerant of money-losing tech companies lately, so these losses will likely put a dent in Airbnb's valuation, which was estimated to be worth more than $30 billion.
One 2018 paper even found that several strains of bacteria were becoming "more tolerant" of alcohol-based hand sanitizers — and could one day be resistant to them, the way superbugs are resistant to antibiotics.
This might sound harmless enough, but research repeatedly shows that when this happens, we become much more extreme in our views and less tolerant of anyone who is or thinks differently than we do.
The Taliban banned games such as cricket and football in the early years of their austere rule because they believed they kept men away from prayers, but they later became more tolerant of cricket.
Where we found differences, they weren't the ones Maher and others would lead you to expect — supposedly "fragile" younger women, for instance, were actually more tolerant of flirtation in the workplace than their elders.
Mining machines sound like miniature jet-engines and can rack up a significant electricity bill, meaning that you can't just stick them in your home computer room (unless you are very tolerant of sound).
The French are traditionally tolerant of labor action, but this time, as the garbage piles up and commuters fight their way onto crowded trains, there are signs that the union may have overplayed its hand.
"The second branch of government isn't very tolerant of the first branch of government, and they don't like us nosing around in their business, even though it's our constitutional duty for oversight," he told CNN.
The Democrats with whom the independent Mr. Sanders caucuses have been tolerant of his not-quite-campaign, in no small part because they do not wish to emulate Republicans, whose wounds have been oozing openly.
Since taking over in August, Khosrowshahi has been trying to improve the image of Uber, which has been rocked by management turmoil and tarnished by revelations about an alleged sexist workplace culture tolerant of chauvinism.
And, despite the central role that attacks on minorities played in Trump's campaign, most Americans have grown more, not less, tolerant of compatriots who do not share their ethnicity, their religion, or their sexual orientation.
Although it has a large Sunni population and a small Shiite minority, its predominant form of Islam is the much smaller, austere Ibadi sect, which tends to be politically quietist and tolerant of other faiths.
Mr. Huang also expressed optimism that the new government of Xi Jinping would be more tolerant of his work because of its avowed goals of promoting a transparent legal system and cracking down on corruption.
Starting in the late 1990s, researchers became aware that the fish was tolerant of the toxic waters at the Lower Passaic Superfund site and at least three other highly polluted areas along the Atlantic coastline.
The longest end of the yield curve came under strongest pressure on growing perception that the Bank of Japan is more tolerant of rises in yields on those maturities than it is on shorter yields.
But since Facebook has no effective competition, we can look forward only to being lectured on being more tolerant of "ideas" we don't like, and to smug talk of the false equivalency of "both sides."
The revolt, which has spread from Khartoum to 173 cities in 15 of Sudan's 18 provinces, is led by disgruntled young professionals from the classes that were long tolerant of Mr. Bashir's iron-fisted rule.
"The Turkish electorate would be much less tolerant of the allegations of betrayal and treason than graft...Such fears explain why the Turkish government has been frantic in its efforts to prevent Reza Zarrab from testifying."
Looking at a series of recent data, it concluded that in many ways sentiment in England was gradually becoming more liberal and tolerant of diversity, but Islam and the reactions it inspired were a clear exception.
Luke Cage, the first season of which dropped last Friday, represents Marvel's attempt to remember its legion of fans are now more diverse and, armed with social networks, far less tolerant of a lack of representation.
Other surveys have found that Americans are becoming more tolerant of trans people, and most of them oppose bathroom bills (attitudes may have shifted on the latter point since 2016, when North Carolina passed its law).
Although the campaign came to be dominated by accusations that Mr Khan was tolerant of Islamic extremism (see Bagehot), it is the more mundane issues of transport and housing that will be filling his in-tray.
While the U.S. continues to be more tolerant of offensive speech than the rest of the world, with 71 percent of Americans believing they should be allowed to say what they want, there are generational differences.
"I think there is something we can learn from penguins and other species in the way that they're tolerant of same-sex relations," Brian Zimmerman told the Thomson Reuters Foundation ahead of Valentine's Day on Thursday.
"We're definitely more steadfast about discussing how necessary it is to be tolerant of consensual actions between knowing adults where no one is harmed," said their frontman Hamed Sinno, a Muslim who openly identifies as queer.
Though more tolerant of foreign workers, the younger generation is also wary of letting them become citizens, lest they dilute the nation's identity — an attitude that seems to have stiffened during the country's prolonged economic slump.
But after everything that's happened at Uber following the former Uber engineer Susan Fowler's disclosure of sexual harassment there, I also wonder if a new, less-tolerant-of-terrible-people wind may be blowing through tech.
I know the annual humbling of the Outsider Art Fair changed me, making me more open, less tolerant of rules and orthodoxies, more understanding of the human urgency to make art and how widespread it is.
Mandy combines the most absurd aesthetic excesses of '70s and '80s horror films with the most absurd thespian excesses of Nicolas Cage, and the movie works best if you're already fond — or at least tolerantof both.
One possible explanation she points to is the that increased US troops on the ground could make commanders more tolerant of civilian casualties as they make decisions designed to protect growing numbers of embedded US military personnel.
Millennials may be the most racially diverse generation in American history, and generally more tolerant of racial differences than their predecessors, but that doesn't make it any easier for them to grapple with race and racism today.
Mitchell lovingly refers to his penis as "Elmo" and takes great pride in dressing it up in various outfits (and sending the snapshots to Hjartarson, who grows increasingly less tolerant of his antics as the film progresses).
So obedient to Gerry that she doesn't work because he doesn't want her to, she is the sort of person whose kindness and eagerness to please make her credulous, and far too tolerant of her husband's cruelty.
Its usage has become barely distinguishable from its classical applications — but now it has an added layer of contempt, suggesting that the condition it describes has only grown worse or that we've grown less tolerant of it.
Tombini, appointed central bank chief by Rousseff in 2011, has been criticized by many investors since then for appearing to be too tolerant of high inflation, especially after the bank slashed interest rates to record lows in 2012.
Estrogen levels fall when a women experiences menopause, causing her to be less tolerant of temperature changes within her body, so it would make sense that changes in this receptor were associated with whether women experience hot flashes.
Of course, it's possible Netflix could get wise to this trick and shut it down in some way, but so far the company has been pretty tolerant of people doing things like sharing passwords and masking their locations.
Three years ago Reddit's atheism subforum, perhaps the largest community of atheists on the internet, was found to be the website's third most bigoted—meaning not just tolerant of overt displays of bigotry, but actively supportive of them.
All kinds of data—YouTube videos of epic fails, an e-mail to your boss, or that winning move in Overwatch—travel over the internet, but some kinds of data are more tolerant of delays or temporary congestion.
It's hard to read the reports of the comments King has made recently and the individuals and groups he has praised without concluding that he either is a racist or is far too tolerant of those who are.
Dr. Deborah Carr, a sociology professor at Rutgers, said that while society may have become more tolerant of some aspects of sexuality, like same-sex relationships and premarital sex, views on sexual affairs by spouses remain essentially unchanged.
Saudi Arabia has been accused of being too tolerant of extremist clerics in the lead-up to 9/11, and there has long been innuendo about high-ranking Saudi officials being involved in the funding of al Qaeda.
" In "The Lucky Country," the 1964 book of essays by Donald Horne that is often described as a wake-up call to an unimaginative nation, Australians are deemed tolerant of mediocrity, but "adaptable when a way is shown.
Flying elevates the bat's metabolism and body temperature — similar to a fever in humans and other mammals — and scientists say this, on an evolutionary scale, could boost a bat's immune system and make it more tolerant of viruses.
"We all need to realize that the Democratic Party is a party of a big tent, and so we have to be tolerant of other member's views and not go after each other in party primaries," said Rep.
For those of us who are tolerant of a wide range of ideas and arguments, but would still like deception and misinformation to not have such an easy foothold in society, Mr. Zuckerberg's comments do not inspire hope.
But when reading ability is so often drawn on class and income lines, we must cast the net wider to be more tolerant of, and helpful to, people who find it hard to utilize words for their benefit.
Roundup is used for weed control in agriculture, industrial and other applications and the company sells seeds with biotech traits that enable crops such as corn, soybeans and cotton to be tolerant of Roundup and other glyphosate-based herbicides.
But, Labour has been wrestling with accusations that it has been tolerant of anti-Semitism among some of its members, and in April leaders of Britain's 270,000 Jews organized a protest accusing Corbyn of failing to address their concerns.
At a high level, he's doing all this because, he argues, Twitter and YouTube and Facebook are de facto public spaces with capricious private overlords, and there are legal reasons that they should be more tolerant of extreme speech.
According to CEO Andrew Torba, the impetus for building a site expressly tolerant of intolerance was "the suppression of conservative sources and stories by the incredibly biased Facebook Trending Topics team," referring to a story Gizmodo reported last May.
Afterward, he dug deeper into the history of the district and realized that what he had seen was state-sanctioned dissident art, to give the illusion that the government was more tolerant of free speech than it actually was.
In particular, women who self-selected themselves as tolerant of or oblivious to or amused by or steeled against his casual misogyny and constant sexual subtext — which was somehow, incongruously and often jarringly, matched with paternal regard — got this.
And as cities have grown and revitalized over the past two decades thanks to millennial gentrification — and become accordingly tolerant of LGBTQ Americans — it's only strengthened the perception that cities are a place where traditional values don't matter anymore.
Defaults by high-profile state-owned issuers including Tianjin-based Tewoo Group also point to a government "increasingly tolerant of defaults including by state-owned enterprises," S&P Global Ratings China country specialist Li Chang said in a statement.
Joe Manchin, the lone Democrat to vote for Kavanaugh, said Tuesday that voters back home have been very "tolerant" of his vote -- but also said his race would turn on health care issues rather than the Supreme Court fight.
And while those new priests and faithful may be more conservative, and less tolerant of homosexuality, than more liberal corners of the Western church favored by Francis, they are also well versed in the issues Francis cares most about.
While still often described as Europe's last dictatorship, Belarus "is not North Korea" and has grown somewhat more tolerant of dissenting voices, said Pavel Belavus, the owner of a shop in Minsk that sells Belarus-themed clothing and literature.
And as cities have grown and revitalized over the past two decades thanks to millennial gentrification — and become accordingly tolerant of LGBTQ Americans — it's only strengthened the perception that cities are a place where "traditional values" don't matter anymore.
If you have doubts about the scope of each problem, consider this: a non-partisan study found that students today are more tolerant of offensive speech than older generations and support for free speech on college campuses is on the rise.
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe police on Tuesday blocked a street protest for the third time in five days, as the main opposition party said hopes were vanishing that the government might become more tolerant of dissent than the one it replaced.
It started with Pim Fortuyn, a Dutch politician who was exceptionally open both about his sexuality (he once described the taste of semen on television) and his belief that Muslims would make the Netherlands less tolerant of people like himself.
Overwatch challenges its base with queer character Blizzards multiplayer online shooter Overwatch has a character who's openly gay, and that's no small thing for a gaming company whose fanbase includes rabid hardcore gamers – not always the most tolerant of groups.
Asked by Bash if there was a noticeable shift in the way Republicans were starting to handle Trump, Collins said that many in her party are still interested in the President's agenda but are not so tolerant of his style.
Yeah, I know there were some smaller cultures and some outliers who were more tolerant of differences, it's very true, but pretty much and the so-called democracies, great democracies where women and slaves were excluded pretty much through our history.
The Taliban had banned games such as cricket and football in the early years of their austere rule because they believed they kept men away from prayers, according to former national cricketer Hasti Gul, but later became more tolerant of cricket.
But his fair points are getting outnumbered by egregious statements and nutty insinuations, like suggesting that President Obama is tolerant of ISIS attacks, an echo of the kooky birther campaign that he led, suggesting that Obama wasn't qualified to be president.
Sarge dismisses the complaints that the site is too tolerant of violent rhetoric, claims that he and the other moderators delete violent content, and yet appears unconcerned when another user points out that they don't come close to getting it all.
In 2014, the two helped propel a nearly anonymous House candidate in Virginia, Dave Brat, to a primary election victory over Eric Cantor, the majority leader at the time, in part by hammering Mr. Cantor as overly tolerant of illegal immigration.
Village residents are tolerant of the bears — "They could break right in here, but they know the rules," said Merlyn Traynor, a proprietor of the Waldo Arms Hotel — and with the whale remains, they have little reason to come after humans.
About a third of respondents said they were less tolerant of sexism in their own lives as a result of Mr. Trump's victory, and 43 percent of parents said it made them teach their children about sexual assault and consent.
But investors said they did not expect a significant market reaction from the ISDA decision, given that Venezuela is making efforts to pay, and that holders of some of the world's highest yielding debt have so far been tolerant of the delays.
Though Feher never uses the phrase "follow the money" explicitly, it applies to his argument that neoliberalism's mixture of deregulation and privatization means we all must be entrepreneurs of our own lives, and tolerant of all the risk that goes with that condition.
As Venezuela is still making efforts to pay, holders of some of the world's highest yielding debt bonds have so far been tolerant of the delays, but that could change if Venezuela is perceived to no longer have enough income to pay.
Nick Statt: I think I'm slightly more tolerant of Negan than you, Bryan, but that's because I know what happens in the comics and am rather senselessly holding onto faith that The Walking Dead can make its big, bad villain a worthwhile character.
Pranav Jandhyala, a member of the College Republicans and one of the Patriot's editors, said the students don't necessarily agree with Yiannopoulos and his cohorts, but their goal is to foster an environment on campus that is more tolerant of divergent views.
It's something I've tried to talk about with my family a lot, that if we maybe looked a little bit different, if our names were a little bit different, then maybe we wouldn't be so tolerant of some of the things he said.
However, female respondents were much less tolerant of men looking at women's breasts than their male counterparts were: among Americans 64 and older, for example, half of women but just a quarter of men said they would consider such ogling sexual harassment.
My sense is that the public understands the difference between an active duty and retired officer more readily than some pundits think, and will not be especially tolerant of an officer-turned-civilian political appointee or elected official who fails to perform.
And when given the Balloon Analogue Risk Task — a test developed by psychologists in 2002 to measure respondents' tolerance for risk — participants who said they felt awe during the show were much more tolerant of risk than the rest of the group.
Chinese officials played on that knowledge by promising to be more helpful regarding North Korea — if only the West would be tolerant of malign Chinese behavior on trade, currency, Taiwan's independence, human rights, and control of the East and South China Seas.
"We don't have to say we're tolerant because we are tolerant of other views," said James Bopp Jr., a member of the platform committee from Indiana who has long supported efforts to make the platform more strongly in favor of traditional marriage.
If I had yelled at her it would only feed into her persecution complex and false belief that LGBT people and their allies, along with people who have left the Mormon church, are angry bullies who are not tolerant of other people's views.
There are stories about other owls being loved to death — fleeing spotting scopes and telephoto lenses only to be hit by cars — or of landowners, once tolerant of owlers on their properties, who revoked access for all because of an unprincipled few.
As fans and local activists have sought ways to preserve his memory on the streets that nurtured him, they have repeatedly been stymied by people who considered him too tolerant of violence, too misogynistic, even too overweight, to merit such public recognition.
Most people around the world, whether religious or not, presume that serial killers are more likely to be atheists than believers in any god, suggests a new study, which counters the common assumption that increasingly secular societies are equally tolerant of nonbelievers.
" Kristin M. of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, whose husband has end-stage kidney disease, opined: "I don't feel that the airlines do enough training on being a bit more tolerant of people with medical equipment that are not coming to the gate in wheel chairs.
Wall Street investors might have been "more tolerant" of these red flags if WeWork's IPO wasn't coming after a series of lackluster public market debuts this year, according to Kathleen Smith, principal at Renaissance Capital, which manages IPO-focused exchange-traded funds.
For example, the researchers suggest that the brine could be used to irrigate plants that are tolerant of salt water, or generate electricity, or it could be mined for a variety of minerals and metals such as magnesium, gypsum, calcium, lithium, potassium and even uranium.
Even so, Americans are increasingly less tolerant of Muslims; a survey from the Public Religion Research Institute in September 2015 found that 56 percent of Americans think Islam is "at odds with American values and way of life," up from 47 percent in 2011.
Anecdotally, I found the in-screen fingerprint reader is less tolerant of off-angle taps, and like all fingerprint readers, OnePlus' optical scanner can still be a bit finicky, sometimes require a long dead-center press instead of a quick tap to let you in.
The state is more tolerant of religious diversity than many European countries, argues Amanda van Eck, director of Inform, a research group that studies religious movements at the London School of Economics; in France, for instance, sects may be prosecuted for crimes including manipulation mentale.
Richer people are less tolerant of dawdling at the ticket barrier, people who stand on the left side of the escalator (which is meant to be kept clear so others can walk on the left) and of music being played loudly from a device.
Rather than saying that you and your partner will definitely have a kid with blue eyes, they give a probability—say that there's a 50 percent chance they'll wind up with blue eyes, or that it's likely they'll be tolerant of milk or the sun.
If traffic estimates do roll out, they could make users more tolerant of longer ETAs and less likely to check a competing app since they'll know their driver might take longer to pick them up because congestion is to blame rather than Uber's algorithm.
But right now, the more pressing problem is that many conservatives are too tolerant of those who commit acts of political violence, and too willing to accept—and promote—the vile conspiracy theories that manifest on the darkest corners of the right-wing internet.
It's less expensive and scientifically easier to modify a single gene to make plants tolerant of herbicides and pesticides than it is to make them withstand drought or less dependent on fertilizers full of greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change, said Gurian-Sherman.
" Appearing on WABC in 2001, Giuliani said, "The city of New York, quite frankly, is quite tolerant of undocumented immigration and this shouldn't surprise you because I've been the mayor for a long time and outspoken on this issue, even nationally, I happen to agree with that.
Using a little harness and leash to protect Tintin from dogs, hawks and cats that weren't as tolerant of squirrels as Coco, Andersen began taking his chattering little pet everywhere he went, documenting their adventures on Facebook and Instagram, where they now have almost 40,0000 followers.
Why it matters: While data shows consumers today are generally less tolerant of ads, the rise of these services shows that there's still an appetite for advertising if it's relevant — and if it means consumers can access their favorite content without having to pay a subscription fee.
There's simply no good scientific evidence that opioid painkillers can effectively treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of opioids' effects — but there's plenty of evidence that prolonged use can result in very bad complications, including a higher risk of addiction, overdose, and death.
There's simply no good scientific evidence that opioid painkillers can actually treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of opioids' effects, but there's plenty of evidence that prolonged use can result in very bad complications, including a higher risk of addiction, overdose, and death.
While in their respective television worlds, Arya Stark probably wouldn't give good girl Nancy Wheeler the time of day — she might be more tolerant of Jonathan Byers since he's a little bit twisted — Maisie Williams seems to have a found fun IRL friends in Dyer and Heaton.
There's some debate among scholars about whether American Muslims' increasing liberalism on issues like homosexuality is the result of recent immigrants' assimilation to mainstream American values or the rise of native-born millennials, who, like their non-Muslim peers, are more tolerant of the LGBT community.
"The Icelanders will apparently be punished by the European Broadcasting Union, which is really not tolerant of those who violate its rules," Eldad Koblenz, CEO of the EBU's Israeli counterpart Kan, told Ynet TV. An EBU spokesman declined direct comment, saying the matter was under discussion.
The Trevor Project: This $6 million organization exists to support LGBT youth in crisis, operates a safe social network, supports research into decreasing the burden of suicide and depression in this population and advocates to help the nation continue to become more tolerant of its diversity.
Over the past few years, the Chinese regime has become ever less tolerant of political dissent — to such an extent that, these days, American leaders have become far more reluctant to make claims about China's political future or the impact on it of trade and investment.
There's only very weak scientific evidence that opioid painkillers can effectively treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of opioids' effects — but there's plenty of evidence that prolonged use can result in very bad complications, including a higher risk of addiction, overdose, and death.
There's only very weak scientific evidence that opioid painkillers can effectively treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of opioids' effects — but there's plenty of evidence that prolonged use can result in very bad complications, including a higher risk of addiction, overdose, and death.
As the Federal Reserve has begun increasing interest rates in the United States and as the European Central Bank looks to withdraw monetary stimulus of its own, investors have become less tolerant of the risks present in many smaller developing countries, and have begun pulling their cash.
Now, in all three cases governments held the line and despite showing signs that they might change policy, have stuck to the principle that while invading, annexing, and dismantling neighbouring countries may have been acceptable in the past, the world is far less tolerant of it today.
As a result, the Chinese government has generally been somewhat more tolerant of labor activity at factories belonging to multinationals, and to some extent at factories in their supply chains, while taking a very strict stance toward any hint of independent labor actions at purely domestic companies.
What's more, he must keep up a political dialogue with diverse groups that felt excluded from the peace process, particularly the far right and the local and emergent elites who are weary about a pact with the guerrillas and who have been tolerant of paramilitary violence.
And while many economists, including some of Mr. Xi's top advisers, continue to lobby openly for more market-oriented policies, the government has also become less tolerant of those who directly and publicly criticize it for not doing enough, including by censoring them on social media.
Though Germany is arguably among the most law-abiding and tolerant of the European democracies, the Germans must regularly contend with reminders of their Nazi past, especially by countries like Greece, Poland or Hungary that find themselves on the receiving end of European Union admonishment or censure.
"The Icelanders will apparently be punished by the European Broadcasting Union, which is really not tolerant of those who violate its rules," Eldad Koblenz, CEO of the EBU's Israeli counterpart Kan, told Ynet TV. An EBU spokesman declined direct comment, saying the matter was under discussion.
It's not that Chuck & Larry has aged so poorly because of its crude humor, or because our society is less tolerant of work that's offensive to marginalized communities, but precisely because the meek efforts Chuck & Larry make in the name of "tolerance" now seem so transparent and one-dimensional.
Several days ago, Thomas Friedman of the New York Times, who until recently has been far more tolerant of Trump's behavior on Russia than I have, issued his own dire warning and call to action on the most important security issue facing the United States; better late than never.
That's OK for now — "Central banks are more tolerant of running the economy a bit hotter for a period," he said — and inflation overall can be a good thing, because it means we're not in a period of deflation, which was a big concern for many over the last few years.
A YouGov survey shows the American public were less tolerant of breastfeeding compared to the British; although the Fair Labor Standards Act was amended in 2010 to require employers to "provide reasonable break time" and space for women to pump breastmilk at work, only 16.4 percent of American women breastfeed exclusively.
Kratom has been widely used in Southeast Asia for years without reported overdose deaths, though there have been reports of users becoming more dependent and tolerant of it with increasing doses, said Oliver Grundmann, a professor of medicinal chemistry at the University of Florida who has been studying the supplement.
Meanwhile, China and Mr. Xi, who at last week's Group of 20 meeting in Germany was angling to replace America as a global leader, have grown more economically and militarily powerful, more committed to repressive ways and less tolerant of places like Hong Kong that aim to set their own path.
As patients are transported by chunky VR goggles into a three-dimensional world of Japanese zen gardens or snowy hillsides, they become more tolerant of minor but painful procedures such as having a cut stitched, a burn treated, a urinary catheter inserted or a dislocated shoulder pushed back into place.
"The real thrust of the majority opinion is that the Constitution is less tolerant of racial bias than other forms of juror misconduct, but it is hard to square this argument with the nature of the Sixth Amendment right on which petitioner's argument and the court's holding are based," he wrote.
Cash-strapped Venezuela has been late with payments in recent weeks, but holders of some of the world's highest yielding debt, which are close to 10 times higher than those of neighboring Colombia, have so far been tolerant of the delays and largely confident that Caracas will keep trying to pay.
Less agreeable people are less tolerant of deviations from convention "This ideology of standardness and correctness — seeing everything that is not standard as deviant — is constantly confronting [the] linguistic reality which is of a lot of [language] diversity, so I would imagine that personality traits would correlate with language attitudes," Guy told Mashable.
There is also a distinction to be drawn between Al Jazeera's English-language service (started with the help of many staff poached from the BBC) and its Arabic version, which is more biased in support of political Islam, more tolerant of extremism and closer to being a mouthpiece for the Qatari government.
Still, while the Czech Republic recognizes same-sex partnerships and is considered one of the most liberal countries in Europe, it has stumbled on gay rights issues under the populist President Milos Zeman, who has been inconsistent on the issue — tolerant of gay and lesbian people but outspokenly against them becoming parents.
Its first mainstream use was, improbably, in a 2015 Vogue article, in which writer Michelle Ruiz detailed a "calendar-consuming siege that hijacks most major holidays," a life of being dragged annually to places like Madison Square Garden and Saratoga Springs for shows she was tolerant of but far from ecstatic about.
"Both human subjects and animals could profit from this treatment because allergic cat owners would reduce their risk of developing chronic diseases, such as asthma, and become more tolerant of their cats, which therefore could stay in the households and not need to be relinquished to animal shelters," the researcher write in the paper.
As Keith Humphreys, drug policy expert at Stanford University, explained, there's simply no good scientific evidence that opioid painkillers can actually treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of opioids' effects, but there's plenty of evidence that prolonged use can result in very bad complications, including a higher risk of addiction, overdose, and death.
The economy is mired in its worst crisis in a decade, and security forces have in the past week snuffed out five attempts by the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) to hold street demonstrations, dashing hopes that the government might live up to promises of becoming more tolerant of dissent than the one it replaced.
However, there can be no doubt that this attack will further the divide between those voters who are at some level tolerant of the rising population and influence of Muslims in France, and those who support Le Pen, who has held firm on her anti-Sharia and immigration reform ideals in the run up to the election.
But as the Obama administration issued new documents last week pressuring schools to allow people who identify as the opposite sex into the restroom, locker room, and other facilities of their choice, it has become clear that it is the left that is anti-choice -- and the right that is respectful and tolerant of different beliefs.
If you can embrace the power that pride in personal achievement brings, and can be tolerant of differing points of view, yet pursue your own self-determined course—despite pressure to conform exerted by collectivists and authoritarians across the political and religious spectrum—then Satan always serves as a formidable and inspirational archetype of strength, liberty and iconoclasm.
The good news is that lots of white Americans who may be happily tolerant of racist public officials nonetheless aren't the kind of deeply committed ideological racists who are excited to forgo tangible economic and public safety benefits just for the psychological thrills of excluding DREAMers from public life or a punter's chance at altering the long-term demographic trajectory of the country.
When a commissioner said true believers use religion to justify atrocities like slavery or the Holocaust, and that religious people often suffer from this "despicable" tic, the state was being "neither tolerant nor respectful of Mr Phillips' religious beliefs", Justice Kennedy wrote: he deserved a commission that was "neutral toward and tolerant of" his Christian beliefs, not brimming with animus.
Though the campaign encourages people to open a dialogue with someone they don't see eye to eye with, Women's March tells Broadly that "the goal of unconditional acceptance is not to learn how to become tolerant of bigotry and oppression," but rather to learn "to encounter each other with honesty and compassion [and] create space for more of both in the world."
Rubio's path to victory is to do well in some of the upcoming Southern contests on Super Tuesday where voters are not as tolerant of Trump as in South Carolina, while besting Ted Cruz in Northeastern primaries like New York and Pennsylvania, where voters want someone who at least seems like the most moderate and reasonable candidate in the bunch.
While I have a greater appreciation for cold weather than some people, as heat is the enemy of fashion, I am by no means more tolerant of the chill—I always carry an extra layer in my purse because I don't like being cold, whether I'm on the air-conditioned subway in late July or walking down Prince Street on New Year's Eve.

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