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"impatient of" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to be unwilling to tolerate or wait for something. Example: The students were impatient of their teacher's long lectures. They were eager to move on to more interactive and hands-on learning activities.
Exact(58)
This commitment makes him impatient of literariness.
My own childhood reading makes me impatient of such questions.
"Americans are an active restless people impatient of slow profits," he wrote.
Unlike Italy's previous centre-left leaders, Mr Renzi is genuinely impatient of what Europe has become.
Life, impatient of their fears and hesitancies, is leaving these characters behind.
A younger generation, from the late 1960s, was more open to fantasy and the imagination but impatient of formal discipline.
He was thought to lack judgment and stability and was regarded as a guerrilla fighter impatient of discipline.
They were impatient of my stammering, and if they did not ignore me completely, which I preferred, they bullied me.
They are growing impatient of seeing "staff engagement" as something that languishes on NHS to-do lists.
He seems impatient of too much self-analysis, disliking all the symbol and metaphor that has accreted to the mountain.
Similar(1)
With a smile intermittently surfacing on his face, Bryant used the words "stupid," "dumb" and "idiotic" while discussing the views and misconceptions of impatient critics of his team.
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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