tolerate
— Verb
– English
~ have a tolerance for a poison or strong drug or pathogen or environmental condition; "The patient does not tolerate the anti-inflammatory drugs we gave him"
tolerate
— Verb
– English
~ recognize and respect (rights and beliefs of others); "We must tolerate the religions of others"
tolke
— Verb
– Danish
~ oversætte især mundtligt fra ét sprog til et andet
tolke
— Verb
– Danish
~ udtrykke el. gengive fx et kunstnerisk værk, en me ...
toll
— Verb
– English
~ ring slowly; "For whom the bell tolls"
toll
— Verb
– English
~ charge a fee for using; "Toll the bridges into New York City"
tomle
— Verb
– Danish
~ rejse på tommelfingeren; blaffe
tone down
— Verb
– English
~ deaden (a sound or noise), especially by wrapping
tone
— Verb
– English
~ change the color or tone of; "tone a negative"
tone down
— Verb
– English
~ make less strong or intense; soften; "Tone down that aggressive letter"; "The author finally tamed some of his potentially offensive statements"
tone
— Verb
– English
~ utter monotonously and repetitively and rhythmically; "The students chanted the same slogan over and over again"
tone
— Verb
– English
~ give a healthy elasticity to; "Let's tone our muscles"
tone
— Verb
– English
~ change to a color image; "tone a photographic image"
tone
— Verb
– English
~ vary the pitch of one's speech
give tongue to
— Verb
– English
~ articulate; either verbally or with a cry, shout, or noise; "She expressed her anger"; "He uttered a curse"
double tongue
— Verb
– English
~ play fast notes on a wind instrument
tongue-tie
— Verb
– English
~ deprive of speech; "When he met his idol, the young man was tongue-tied"
tongue
— Verb
– English
~ articulate by tonguing, as when playing wind instruments