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Discover LudwigThe phrase "grow impatient" is correct and is commonly used in written English.
You can use it when someone's patience is wearing thin and they have become irritated or frustrated due to the delay of a situation. For example, "As the wait for the bus dragged on, the passengers began to grow impatient."
Exact(54)
Sometimes you grow impatient, angry, resentful.
Critics grow impatient with Professor Dawkins's atheism.
When we're losing, they can grow impatient.
At that, Judge Pauley appeared to grow impatient.
If you grow impatient, it will go wrong.
WHY did millions of Egyptian citizens grow impatient with his leadership?
Seasoned dog owners might grow impatient with the couple's hand-wringing over such ho-hum misdeeds.
The government hoped that the public would grow impatient with the disruption to traffic and business.
I knew I would grow impatient with him, so I left.
George W. Bush may well grow impatient with Europeans' urging him to be cautious.
Meanwhile, some swing voters grow impatient with Mr. Gingrich, especially as his path to the nomination becomes more mathematically implausible.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com