All 10 Uses of
endure
in
Far from the Madding Crowd
- You torture me to say it was done in thoughtlessness—I never thought of it in that light, and I can't endure it.†
Chpt 19-21
- I can endure being told I am in the wrong, if you will only tell it me gently!†
Chpt 31-33
- Don't think I am a timid woman and can't endure things."†
Chpt 37-39
- What a way Oak had, she thought, of enduring things.†
Chpt 43-45 *
- At the sight and sound of that, to her, unendurable act, Bathsheba sprang towards him.†
Chpt 43-45
- The sight, coming as it did, superimposed upon the other dark scenery of the previous days, formed a sort of climax to the whole panorama, and it was more than he could endure.†
Chpt 46-48
- Six years were a long time, but how much shorter than never, the idea he had for so long been obliged to endure!†
Chpt 49-51
- Bathsheba was not a women to be made a fool of, or a woman to suffer in silence; and how could he endure existence with a spirited wife to whom at first entering he would be beholden for food and lodging?†
Chpt 49-51
- That Bathsheba could not endure this man was evident; in fact, he was continually coming to her with some tale or other, by which he might creep into favour at the expense of persons maligned.†
Chpt 49-51
- Deeds of endurance, which seem ordinary in philosophy, are rare in conduct, and Bathsheba was astonishing all around her now, for her philosophy was her conduct, and she seldom thought practicable what she did not practise.†
Chpt 52-54 *
Definitions:
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(endure as in: endured the pain) to suffer through (or put up with something difficult or unpleasant)
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(endure as in: endure through the ages) to continue to exist