We have no meanings for "become inured" in our records yet.
1 As for himself, he had simply become inured to the desperate drudgery.
2 It is inconceiveable that Irish society would ever become inured to such violence.
3 Europeans may have become inured to reports of atrocities from Algeria.
4 By remaining in the neighbourhood, I am become inured to it.
5 I have become inured to the messages on the outside of cigarette packages.
6 It was wintry, but we had become inured to the cold.
7 It would seem that gradually we become inured to numbers, immune to them.
8 By that time he had become inured to his convict life.
9 A dubious contraction, in some parts, but I have become inured to it.'
10 We all, I think, have become inured to Moore's law.
11 Thus their hands become inured to the motion, and it does not affect them.
12 Thus quickly had she become inured to the strange circumstances of a new life.
13 For himself, he had become inured to a single life.
14 After it has become inured to the heat, it is not as likely to crack.
15 This probably means I have become inured to the pleadings of some of our prominent citizens.
16 They had all become inured to things going roughly; but things suddenly going smoothly swamped them.
Other examples for "become inured"
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This collocation consists of: Become inured through the time
Become inured across language varieties