abide

acatar
definition
verb
I said I would abide by their decision
accept or act in accordance with (a rule, decision, or recommendation).
if there is one thing I cannot abide it is a lack of discipline
be unable to tolerate (someone or something).
translation of 'abide'
verb
acatar,
hacer cuestión de,
mantener,
atenerse a,
soportar,
esperar,
aguantar,
someterse a,
tolerar,
permanecer,
morar
example
But unless his reactionary vision begins to be actively countered, that is the impression that will 'abide' .
at least one memory will 'abide'
For those of us privileged to have been in Walsh Park last Wednesday evening the memories of a marvellous occasion for Waterford football will 'abide' .
How can faith and fear 'abide' in the face of this avalanche of enlightenment, this flash-flood of knowledge and exposure to everything that once had been only Our secrets?
if there is one thing I cannot 'abide' it is a lack of discipline
A central tenet of Shintoism is the concept of kami, spirits that 'abide' in and are worshipped at shrines, representing human beings and things found in nature.
In the meantime, ‘homeland security’ anxieties 'abide' in many American households.
if there is one thing I cannot 'abide' it is a lack of discipline
many unskilful Men do 'abide' in our City of London
Still, let the memory 'abide' of him chewing the ends of his moustache.
Though the new chief would be ‘his man’, it is not clear how long such loyalties would 'abide' .
I said I would 'abide' by their decision
For times when grief and loss 'abide' within consciousness, a book like this can be sustaining because it is permission to be devastated within the promise of consolation.
I said I would 'abide' by their decision
Where does the consciousness 'abide' before it takes rebirth or becomes liberated?
Tell them that faith, hope and love, these 'abide' , but the greatest of all is love.
The Elder says, ‘Those who abide in love 'abide' in God, and God abides in them’.
In the hills and valleys the memory of the echoes of the old anthem 'abides' .
The schoolboy was bailed to live where directed by social services and he must 'abide by' any rules.
As a result of our tumultuousness, there 'abides' in the American psyche an idea so powerful it ennobles us, and lifts us high above the problems which beset us.
‘God 'cannot abide' sin,’ he explains guilelessly to Read.
The very medium of mutual understanding 'abides' in a peculiar half-transcendence.
But then, when Jesus said that he must undergo suffering and death, Peter simply 'couldn't abide' it.
The PA said that it had always 'abided by' the decisions of the court.
This proves to be very difficult because underneath all of the anger and pain, love still 'abides' .
When harmony persists in the home, harmony 'abides' in the community, and harmony exists in the country.
But by nature, Kirstie 'couldn't abide' things ‘hanging in the air’, as it were.
I shall tot up the votes on Monday evening, and will 'abide by' the majority decision.
The serious collector of funny names accepts only those of real people, and 'abides by' certain rules of the game, just as do those who fish for trout.
They will have to learn these things, and have opportunity to learn them, precisely because, by God's grace, ‘love 'abides' .’
Credits: Google Translate