inure in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

inure in the PONS Dictionary

inure Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to inure sb to sth
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
It's left many riders frustrated with the delays, while others have become inured.
www.thestar.com
Because as crimes become ever more grotesque we risk becoming inured not just to acts of evil but their impact on the victim as well.
www.dailymail.co.uk
Even for a resilient population, and companies, inured to frequent power cuts, the sheer magnitude of the back-to-back blackouts has been a jolt.
www.ft.com
You may have thought that racing a car at up to 210mph might inure a man to nerves.
www.dailymail.co.uk
But it's undeniable that we've all become a little inured to things that might have been considered unspeakably horrifying 50 years ago.
www.npr.org
Just another day at the office for a man inured to indignity.
www.independent.co.uk
Have we become inured to the systematically induced inequalities in our policies and our laws?
www.noozhawk.com
It's that there are certain movies that only grow richer with return visits, or whose pleasures seem inexplicable inured to the diminishing glow of repetition.
flavorwire.com
Or maybe they're just inured to it by now.
www.avclub.com
They inure to the principals benefit or render the principal liable, as the case may be, without any benefit or liability attaching to the agent.
en.wikipedia.org

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