Impatience can stem from a variety of causes, including a desire for immediate gratification, high stress levels, and a lack of control over one's circumstances. Additionally, societal pressures and fast-paced lifestyles can exacerbate feelings of impatience, as people often expect quick results and solutions. Psychological factors, such as anxiety or frustration, can also contribute to a person's inability to wait or tolerate delays.
Impatience
I always hope that my impatience will pass quickly.
Functioning on Impatience was created in 1998.
Yes, pain and stress can cause impatience. Stress is the body's response to a real or percieved danger, and one of the responses is anxiety, and that is a lot like impatience.
There is no such word as inpatience. You probably mean "Impatience". "When John kept disturbing his mother for the paper, his mother told him not have such impatience." Or, "Impatience is not desirable as it will cost you dearly."
Impatience
Impatience is the inability to wait or persevere calmly, without anger, dejection or defeatism, or irrational action.
The cast of Impatience - 1928 includes: Yvonne Selma as La femme
impatience
Impatience
The verb for impatient is "impatience."
The word 'impatient' is an adjective, not a noun. The noun form is impatience, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for an emotion.