We have no meanings for "so inured" in our records yet.
1 But, even now, Elsie was not impatient, so inured had she been to neglect.
2 He had become so inured to hard work that it seemed he could not stop.
3 They seemed so inured to the medical examiner's odd name that no one reacted to it.
4 Are you really so inured to temptation?
5 They had grown so inured to terrible news that she had to emphasize this more than once.
6 We never felt exhaustion, neither were we in fact at all weary, so inured were we to hardship.
7 Rabbi Zira so inured his body (to endurance) that the fire of Gehenna had no power over it.
8 But are we so inured to thrills that rollercoasters now need to rely on a film franchise for extra frisson?
9 It is possible the propagandists are so inured to lying without consequence that they genuinely thought the explanation would fly.
10 He was, in a way, so inured to disappointments that he recognized the very tones in which they were usually announced.
11 A child must either grieve with us or become so inured to our plaints that he pays no attention to them.
12 People are so inured to the evils that they feel as if it were unreasonable, if not wrong, to complain of them.
13 I was so accustomed to be ever two, and so inured to be never single, that methinks I am but half myself.
14 Over time he became so inured to the sight, smell, and taste of blood that even his dreams ran red with it.
15 Most people are so inured to such a manner of speaking that they do not even realize how often they are using these interjections.
16 Have we become so inured to this parade of our heritage through the sales rooms that it raises no more than a collective shrug?
Other examples for "so inured"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: So inured through the time
So inured across language varieties