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The phrase "incredulous about" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it when you're expressing disbelief or doubt about something. For example, "He was incredulous about the news that his old friend had won the lottery."
Exact(58)
He was incredulous about what had happened.
Mr. Yang is incredulous about the statement.
Her husband, Leon, was incredulous about the lawn.
Feinberg is incredulous about what he identifies as "some people's inability to function in the wake of a tragedy".
"Are you really taping me drinking a beer right now?" Beckett said, incredulous about his fame.
Many audiences, he concedes, have been incredulous about the behaviour of characters in Compliance.
He remains incredulous about the outrage over some of his comments.
Seth Meyers is incredulous about what has transpired in the Russia scandal since he was last on the air.
His mother was incredulous about seeing a doctor – she had a patently unshakable fear of doctors because her father went to an institution and never returned.
Similar(2)
By lumping them together, Jones argues, anthropologists developed influential theories about the supposed cultural difference between "modern" people who take a rational, incredulous stance about magic performances and "primitive" people who regard magic with a naïve credulity.
That sets Warne off on an incredulous one about the 4/5 field for Swann.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com