Synonym: agitate, bother, discomfort, disquiet, distress, disturb, perturb, plague, stir, upset, vex, worry. Antonym: relieve. Similar words: troubled, double, double up, double back, voluble, control group, round and round, no doubt. Meaning: ['trʌbl] n. 1. a source of difficulty 2. an angry disturbance 3. an event causing distress or pain 4. an effort that is inconvenient 5. a strong feeling of anxiety 6. an unwanted pregnancy. v. 1. move deeply 2. to cause inconvenience or discomfort to 3. disturb in mind or make uneasy or cause to be worried or alarmed 4. take the trouble to do something; concern oneself 5. cause bodily suffering to and make sick or indisposed.
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181. John's going to have a lot of trouble with him. You can see it coming.
182. At the first sign of trouble they had disappeared to England.
183. A large praetorian bureaucracy filled with ambitious and often sycophantic people makes work and makes trouble.
184. If you turn a deaf ear to my warnings, you'll land in trouble.
185. Next time you pull a stunt like that don't expect me to get you out of trouble.
186. I'm not suggesting for a minute that she meant to cause a lot of trouble.
187. Thank you for going to so much trouble to find what I was looking for.
188. The trouble with her is that she is too headstrong.
189. We'll let ourselves in for trouble if we take over this business.
190. All these modern gadgets are more trouble than they're worth.
191. If you domesticate this raccoon,(http://sentencedict.com/trouble.html) it will have trouble living in the wild.
192. We had trouble with our neighbors over the noise that they were making.
193. Trouble broke out in the match when one of the players called a member of the other team a cheat.
194. She got herself out of trouble by dropping Laura in it.
195. The UN is sending peacekeeping troops into the trouble spot.
196. Strategically placed video cameras can alert police to any trouble.
197. He had a reputation for making trouble in the classroom.
198. The trouble is that few want to buy, despite the knockdown prices on offer.
199. I'm having trouble finding another job - everyone says I'm overqualified.
200. The pound has fallen to a new low amid worries that the British economy is heading for trouble.
201. He's a real goody two - shoes . He'd never do anything that might get him into trouble.
202. The company will be in serious/real trouble if we lose this contract.
203. I went to a good deal of trouble to get this ticket.
204. He got into trouble with the police while he was still at school.
205. He has had a bit of trouble, and I have to straighten it out for him.
206. The government accused unnamed "foreign interests" of inciting the trouble.
207. He had a nose for trouble and a brilliant tactical mind.
208. It was such a small thing to have caused so much trouble.
209. Adolescents are most likely to get into trouble when they're at a loose end.
210. When boundaries between countries are not clearly defined, there is usually trouble.
More similar words: troubled, double, double up, double back, voluble, control group, round and round, no doubt, without doubt, public, publish, publisher, publicly, in public, republic, Republican, publicity, troop, patron, patrol, stroke, strong, publication, control, tropical, courtroom, introduce, electronic, astronomer, introspect.