'I understand your worries' is correct and can be used in written English. You can use it when someone is expressing their concerns, anxieties, or fears and you want to show sympathy or comfort. For example: "I know this is a difficult situation, but I understand your worries.".
I can understand your worry about lymphoma because of your brother's experience, but please put that behind you.
If you understand your worries, they can become, well, less worrisome.
I give him a look to say, "I understand your position, but I'm worried your ground rules will make for a terrible interview".
That said, hearing a friend say, "You're getting worked up over nothing" may be more frustrating than helpful; make sure the friend really understands your worries instead of dismissing them.
Understand your worry.
Parental understanding: "During the past 30 days, how often did your parents or guardians understand your problems and worries?" [ 25 ] (Recoded: never to rarely as 'no' and sometimes to always as 'yes'yes
"I understand the worries about water among the people," Mr. Benavides said Thursday on RPP radio.
I love the desktop app, it’s always running on my Mac. Ludwig is the best English buddy, it answers my 100 queries per day and stays cool.
Cristina Valenza
Retail Lead Linguist @ Apple Inc.