Dictionary
On sufferance
adverb
Unwillingly agreed to or barely tolerated.
Exact(41)
Women were effectively "on sufferance" in Oxbridge, particularly in older sciences such as physics and chemistry, in which they were a small minority.
On sufferance, it is true; beholden to various big beasts in his cabinet (see article); and vulnerable to bad news from by-elections and the like in the 12 months before a general election must be held.
When one enters the galleries at the Palace of Holyroodhouse or Buckingham Palace, one is made to feel that one is there on sufferance, by the Queen's special dispensation.
Bulganin stayed on as prime minister, but because he had been one of the plotters, this was only on sufferance.
A lower-league pro of my acquaintance had to be pulled off one such ingénu, who informed him he was out on loan on sufferance.
Their churches also exist on sufferance.
Similar(19)
They exist on the sufferance of larger states on whom they depend for defence and for transport links.
Nobody bothers to clear them away.For all its rulers' bombast, Abkhazia exists on Russian sufferance.
My struggle is a very simple matter, it depends on spirit, sufferance".
With difficulty, and largely on human sufferance, animals have nevertheless survived in association with contemporary vegetation zones.
That preamble is considered by the Albanians and other minorities to render them second-class citizens living on the sufferance of the Macedonians.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com