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Discover Ludwig"grown to hate" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It typically means that someone has developed a strong dislike or animosity towards something or someone over time. Example: She had grown to hate her job, with its long hours and demanding boss. In this sentence, the verb "grown" indicates that the hatred towards the job was not immediate, but rather developed gradually.
Exact(44)
It's also a story I've grown to hate.
"We have grown to hate each other," he said.
Or, more accurately, I have grown to hate them.
He had grown to hate the life of a pro football player, he said.
"I knew girls who had grown to hate swimming and hated just getting into the pool," Barry said.
I blew off Twitter in part because I had just spent a year managing an online community, and I had grown to hate it.
Similar(16)
She quickly grows to hate her new masters.
I am growing to hate my own work.
Like Agassi with tennis, Pendleton grows to hate cycling.
Every single day, I was growing to hate humanity more.
How I grew to hate the sun and summer.
More suggestions(22)
growing to hate
grow to hate
grown to despise
grown to like
grown to dislike
grown to want
grown to detest
grown to annoy
grown to love
grown to resent
reported to hate
grown to loathe
grown to distrust
grown to accommodate
grown to expect
grown to accumulate
grown to have
grown to zeppelin
grown to appreciate
grown to feel
grown to appease
grown to scale
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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