Home

Tolerat

Tolerat is a term that occurs most prominently as a non-English word, primarily found in Romanian rather than as a standard term in English. In Romanian, tolerat is the past participle of the verb tolera (to tolerate) and functions as an adjective or participle meaning “tolerated” or “acceptable.”

Etymology and related forms

Tolerat derives from Latin tolerare, through the Romance language family. In Romanian, it agrees with gender

Usage

In Romanian texts, tolerat is used to describe something that has been borne, accepted, or permitted. As

Other uses

Beyond Romanian grammar, tolerat may appear in discussions of language, translation, or cultural texts that reference

See also

Tolerance, toleration, tolera (Romanian verb). Note that in English, the corresponding standard form is “tolerated.”

and
number,
with
forms
such
as
tolerat
(masculine
singular)
and
tolerată
(feminine
singular),
among
other
inflected
variants
for
plural
usage.
The
form
and
agreement
reflect
common
Romanian
participial
adjectives.
a
participial
adjective,
it
can
modify
nouns
and
participate
in
compound
phrases.
Outside
Romanian,
tolerat
is
not
a
widely
recognized
term
in
English-language
lexicons,
and
its
appearance
typically
signals
Romanian
influence
or
quoted
multilingual
material.
Romanian
vocabulary.
It
is
not
known
as
a
distinct
widely
cited
concept,
theory,
or
technique
in
mainstream
science,
philosophy,
or
pop
culture
under
the
name
“tolerat.”