Inure in a sentence as a verb

Many prescriptive rights inure in a time period as short as 5 years or as long as 20.

I also imagine there will be a lot of false positives that will inure strangers to responding.

This sudden interest and push to freelancing and gigs seems like a way to inure people to the loss of this ironclad right to get paid.

If they inure themselves playing softball - it's calamity.

They train children to do what they're told, reduce or sometimes channel creativity, and inure children to being ranked or judged[1].

There are daft laws that people sometimes break and get punished for, which could not have been foreseen and for which no moral culpability can inure.

Will it inure us to violence or create hypersensitivity?

This article is from 2003, and Laura has improved quite a bit since then:"I began to try to inure myself by getting in a car and riding for five minutes.

Moral rights, however, inure to the author and are inalienable.

If you're lucky enough to be part of a group, or to have someone say "oh yeah, that's how Linus is" then maybe you get over it and inure yourself to the abuse.

A private company in the government's position at the time could have taken a huge equity stake in any activity in the west, one that would thanks to the law of property inure to this day. Though anybody who originally bought that land would be long-dead today, all his or her successors would have taken subject to that equity stake.

Some react in an in-the-end-positive method because they are hurt by people like you--they develop scar tissue to inure themselves against your consciously-adopted sociopathy.

Any Prussian model school will inure them to ranking, tedium, busywork, being ranked and doing things that seem pointless because an authority figure said to as well as another, whether they begin education in a child centred school or not.

Aren't both political parties equally culpable for the destruction?A frank discussion about industrial policy would not inure to the benefit of any established political actor.

Cities have every incentive to continue restrictive zoning because the immediate costs are externalized to the larger region, while the benefits--satisfaction of home owning voters who don't want multi-family dwellings in their neighborhood--inure directly to the city leaders.

Inure definitions

verb

cause to accept or become hardened to; habituate; "He was inured to the cold"

See also: harden indurate