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The phrase "impolite about" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in a sentence to describe someone's behavior or words that are considered rude or disrespectful. Example: She was always impolite about her coworkers, often speaking to them in a condescending tone and making snide remarks about their work.
Exact(5)
There was something gloriously impolite about the way Chelsea dug in and saw off Barça.
We need the press to be noisy and impolite about obtaining the truth.
There's nothing impolite about letting your friends and family pick out cuts and styles that work for them.
Yet there's something puzzling as well as false and impolite about the mayor's outburst in his New Statesman interview with Jemima Khan.
I am not going to say anything too impolite about this book, because the author can turn herself into birds and beasts and speak to divine persons, and they will surely punish me.
Similar(55)
The frontrunner has spent much of the campaign apologising for impolite remarks about neighbours.
LOS ANGELES — Here is the impolite truth about a lot of child actors: They are unbearable little creatures.
The impolite fiction about "no hostilities" might have been sustainable, in a public-relations sense, when the Libyan war was in a stalemate.
For the past few weeks they have toyed with hostile takeovers and bidding wars, and they whisper impolite things about their rivals.
Do Pascal's impolite remarks about Obama reveal her to be a racist?
Some posted impolite remarks about Cruz's personality or political positions.
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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