"Though the food became no more palatable, he soon became sufficiently inure to it".
The only concrete noun in your sentence is sentence. Note: The noun 'sentence' is a concrete noun only for a written or spoken sentence; the noun 'sentence' as a word for a penalty imposed for a crime conviction is an abstract noun.
With the exception of not capitalizing the 'y' at the start of the sentence, it is a correct sentence.
The first noun in a sentence may be the subject of the sentence, but NOT ALWAYS, for example:John sat on the bench. (the noun 'John' is the subject of the sentence)He sat on the bench. (the pronoun 'he' is the subject of the sentence, the first noun in the sentence is 'bench', the object of the preposition 'on')
Which sentence sounds the strongest?
When it is at the start of a sentence.
Many claim that watching violent movies and playing games filled with violence will inure a child to violence and its consequences. To inure someone is to cause a hardening of feelings or emotions to a set of circumstances.
inure
Antonym
inure
I have become quite inured to the arduousness of the study of law. Hearing the story of his roommate's alcoholic aunt for the sixth time inured Jason; he no longer listens.
Irresolute, tentative, mild, unassuming
NPR puzzle huh? Maybe INSURE and INURE Insure: To guarantee against loss or harm Inure: To accustom to hardship But inure has 2 syllables so I dunno I think it is Resign / Reign
inure, issue, istle
To accustom or habituate, usually to hardship or difficulty. To render someone immune or resistant to something, such as a disease or a negative experience. In legal terms, to take effect or become enforceable by use or operation over time.
genro, inure, ignore
The provision benefits future parties who may take over the contract.
inure: to accustom to hardship, difficulty, pain, etc lethal: of, pertaining to, or causing death; deadly; fatal