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"grow fond" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to describe increasing feelings of affection, love, or attachment towards something or someone. Example: Over time, I grew fond of my new classmates.
Exact(24)
But just as we grow fond of these characters and their foibles another man ambles onto the property: "He wasn't exactly a fat man.
And as for the setting of WB Yeats's 'The Stolen Child', if you guffaw at first, you soon grow fond of it.
She immerses us so deeply in the worldview of each protagonist that we grow fond of them all, worry about the things that worry them, cease to see the things that they ignore.
Portraying this genial youngster, who has not yet outgrown his obsession with collecting action figures — one of the show's more funny-tasteless gags has a bloodied prisoner being held with his head covered by a "Star Wars" pillow — Mr. Ambudkar delivers a warm performance that makes us see why Yalda might grow fond of him.
You grow fond of Anna, the woman who wants to start her own card making creative business, and gets pushback from her friends who mean well but make her feel bad about her decision.
I'm a minimalist at heart and, although I tend to pour my soul into everything that surrounds me - be it people, memories, objects I grow fond of - I also have a clear and sharp sense of who I am, of what's relevant and what's not.
Similar(33)
"Absence makes the heart grow fonder"?
Did absence make the heart grow fonder?
$23. SPANDEX makes the heart grow fonder.
Absence makes audience's hearts grow fonder.
Accents do make the heart grow fonder.
More suggestions(4)
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com