Sentence examples similar to much impatient from inspiring English sources

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[In a tone of voice that suggests much impatient-to-end-this foot-tapping and watch-checking on his end of the phone line] A tiger.

Also, says Niklas Savander of Nokia, mobility makes people much more impatient.

Giving a photographer less than 60 seconds to shoot his portrait, he seemed very much the impatient superstar, but in an hourlong interview he was casual and energetically talkative.

"Japan has gone through 20 years of economic stagnation, and there is a lot of pain out there, so voters are much more impatient for dramatic reform than politicians realize," said Jeff Kingston, a professor of Japanese politics at Temple University's campus in Tokyo.

But for the first kind of decision (jam now, or later) people are much more impatient, demanding a rate of interest equivalent to 40% a year.This inconsistency applies to chores as well as treats, as Ted O'Donoghue of Cornell University and Matthew Rabin of the University of California, Berkeley, point out.

Driven in Comfort mode, the transmission can smooth out gear changes a bit too much for the impatient driver, especially while trundling in traffic.

This much younger, more impatient generation of donors want to change how they give (ie revamping strategy to be more effective), more than what causes they support.

All alone, conceding that she knows too much, she is impatient with most people, but not with Fredrika, her 13-year-old granddaughter.

Don't relax, they advise us, if democracy takes hold in China: a government "driven by popular emotions, could make the rising Chinese power a much more assertive, impatient, belligerent, even aggressive force".The intriguing word "parallax" in Mr Cumings's title is quickly explained: if you change your position, the thing you are looking at seems to change too.

It leaves you with much to ponder and impatient to return to Enniscorthy.

And though Bishop Wright can be rather impatient with much of the talk of "souls" and "immortality" and "heaven" thoroughly embedded in Christian prayer and ritual, he has no problem when heaven as a "postmortem destination" is seen as a "temporary stage on the way to eventual resurrection of the body".

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