We have no meanings for "more inured" in our records yet.
1 But she was more inured to medical scenes than they were.
2 Madame Jeannin and Olivier, though they were racked by it, were more inured to it.
3 Was it that I had become more inured to adversity, more philosophical, more of a Christian?
4 The veterans of Darien were more inured to all these ills, and better able to resist extreme hunger.
5 Afterward, when he becomes older, and more inured to it, he may be plunged several times in succession.
6 Mimi felt it more keenly than her husband, whose nerves were harder, and who was more inured to danger.
7 They are more inured to privation, more patient than Europeans, who, on these two points, cannot be compared to them.
8 The five horses of Ivan were exchanged for others more inured to the kind of journey they were about to undertake.
9 Napoleon consequently decided that those reports should be brought to him by staff-officers, who were more inured to scenes of distress.
10 The dancers were more inured to pain...
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