TROUBLE vs BOTHER: NOUN
- A condition of pain, disease, or malfunction.
- Vexation; perplexity; worry; difficulties; trials; affliction.
- Annoyance; molestation; persecution.
- Disturbing, annoying, or vexatious circumstance, affair, or state; distress; difficulty.
- An effort that is inconvenient
- Labor; laborious effort: as, it is no trouble.
- In law, particularly French law, anything causing injury or damage such as is the subject of legal relief.
- A disease, or a diseased condition; an affection: as, a cancerous trouble.
- In mining, a small fault. Also called a throw, slide, slip, heave, or check.
- A source or cause of annoyance, perplexity, or distress: as, he is a great trouble to us.
- An event causing distress or pain
- An unwanted pregnancy
- An angry disturbance
- A state of distress, affliction, difficulty, or need.
- A distressing or difficult circumstance or situation.
- A cause or source of distress, disturbance, or difficulty.
- Effort, especially when inconvenient or bothersome.
- Public unrest or disorder.
- Any of various conflicts or rebellions in Ireland or Northern Ireland, especially the period of social unrest in Northern Ireland beginning in 1969.
- An instance of this; a disturbance.
- A strong feeling of anxiety
- Liability to punishment; conflict with authority.
- A malfunction.
- Efforts taken or expended, typically beyond the normal required.
- A difficulty, problem, condition, or action contributing to such a situation.
- A distressful or dangerous situation.
- To be at the pains; to exert one's self; to give one's self inconvenience.
- To get into difficulty or danger.
- A fault or interruption in a stratum.
- That which gives disturbance, annoyance, or vexation; that which afflicts.
- The state of being troubled; disturbance; agitation; uneasiness; vexation; calamity.
- A source of difficulty
- A violent occurrence or event.
- An angry disturbance
- A cause or state of disturbance.
- Blarney; humbug; palaver.
- Trouble; vexation; plague: as, what a bother it is!
- One who, or that which, bothers; state of perplexity or annoyance; embarrassment; worry; disturbance; petty trouble.
- Something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness
- Fuss, ado.
- Trouble, inconvenience.
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: ADJECTIVE
- Troubled; dark; gloomy.
- N/A
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: VERB
- To cause inconvenience or discomfort to
- Take the trouble to do something; concern oneself
- Cause bodily suffering to
- Disturb in mind or make uneasy or cause to be worried or alarmed
- To disturb, stir up, agitate (a medium, especially water).
- To mentally distress; to cause (someone) to be anxious or perplexed.
- Move deeply
- To do something which is of negligible inconvenience.
- To do something at one's own inconvenience.
- To annoy, to disturb, to irritate.
- Make confused or perplexed or puzzled
- Make nervous or agitated
- Intrude or enter uninvited
- Take the trouble to do something; concern oneself
- Cause annoyance in; disturb, especially by minor irritations
- To cause inconvenience or discomfort to
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To take pains.
- To agitate; stir up.
- To inconvenience; bother.
- To cause to have emotional or mental problems that interfere with social functioning.
- To cause to be anxious or worried.
- To afflict with pain or discomfort.
- To feel care or anxiety; to make or take trouble; to be troublesome.
- To cause to be irritated, especially by repeated acts; trouble or annoy: : annoy.
- To make agitated or perplexed; upset.
- To intrude on without warrant or invitation; disturb.
- To give discomfort or pain to.
- To take the trouble (to do something); concern oneself with (accomplishing something).
- To take trouble; concern oneself.
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To disturb; to perplex; to afflict; to distress; to grieve; to fret; to annoy; to vex.
- To give occasion for labor to; -- used in polite phraseology.
- To put into confused motion; to disturb; to agitate.
- To annoy; to trouble; to worry; to perplex. See pother.
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: INTERJECTION
- N/A
- Used to express annoyance or mild irritation.
- A mild expression of annoyance.
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Take the trouble to do something
- Cause bodily suffering to and make sick or indisposed
- Same as troubly.
- To stir up; agitate; disturb; put into commotion.
- Concern oneself
- To disturb in mind; annoy; vex; harass; afflict; distress; worry.
- To put to trouble, inconvenience, pains, or exertion of some kind: used conventionally in courteous requests: as, may I trouble you to shut the door?
- Synonyms Afflict, Distress, etc. (see afflict); perplex, agitate, plague, pester, badger, disquiet, make uneasy, anxious, or restless.
- To become turbid or cloudy.
- To take trouble or pains; trouble one's self; worry: as, do not trouble about the matter.
- To disturb; interrupt or interfere with.
- To bewilder; confuse.
- To give trouble to; annoy; pester; worry.
- [Used in the imperative as an expression of impatience, or as a mild sort of execration.
- Synonyms Pester, Worry, etc. See tease, v. t.
- To trouble one's self; make many words or much ado: as, don't bother about that.
- A source of unhappiness
- Take the trouble to do something
- Concern oneself
- Cause annoyance in
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: RELATED WORDS
- Ill, Disturb, Cark, Disorder, Disquiet, Inconvenience, Pain, Fuss, Upset, Hassle, Distress, Bother, Worry, Problem, Difficulty
- Devil, Pain, Rag, Nuisance, Nark, Inconvenience, Botheration, Annoyance, Hassle, Trouble, Rile, Fuss, Vex, Irritate, Annoy
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Afflict, Distract, Ail, Ill, Disturb, Disorder, Disquiet, Pain, Fuss, Upset, Hassle, Distress, Worry, Problem, Difficulty
- Get to, Nettle, Put out, Devil, Pain, Rag, Nuisance, Nark, Hassle, Trouble, Rile, Fuss, Vex, Irritate, Annoy
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Your dog might have trouble swallowing dry kibble.
- Having trouble logging in and placing web orders?
- Please see the appropriate thread in Trouble Tickets.
- Knowing that will keep you out of trouble.
- Do you have trouble building goodwill with others?
- Some trouble codes indicate a certain calibration has not been performed and some trouble codes indicate a malfunction.
- TROUBLE HANDLING AND TICKETING REQUIREMENTSTrouble handling and trouble ticket tracking services will be required.
- But it was the wrong way and little to my knowledge we can get in serious trouble trouble for doing it.
- In adults, this disorder may cause trouble getting organized, remembering appointments, or even have trouble keeping a job.
- In trouble, deep trouble, I prayed to God.
- Everything just works with no fuss or bother.
- Sounds like too much work to bother with.
- You can fight popular perception but why bother.
- Why the hell did I bother to vote?
- Should I bother with the online refund request?
- So why did I bother posting this then?
- Bother sending and should i bother sending and talk to do non target university have a copy to your university.
- The scratchy foods that bother your gut might be a little different than what bother someone else, but here are some common culprits.
- Different people have different asthma triggers, so what bother one may not bother another.
- What will bother one insurance company may not bother another, he says.
TROUBLE vs BOTHER: QUESTIONS
- Did Bing Crosby have trouble expressing his emotions?
- What happens if Robotroid runs into financial trouble?
- What is this crossword clue trouble-free transition?
- Why do students have trouble with hypothesis testing?
- How does Shakespeare foreshadow trouble in Macbeth?
- Does gabapentin cause insomnia or trouble sleeping?
- Are building contractors having trouble finding work?
- Why is there no diagnostic trouble code on my diagnostic trouble?
- What are the trouble codes for a p3417 OBD-II trouble code?
- What does Never Trouble Trouble Till trouble troubles you mean?
- Should I bother with Duane Reade in this neighborhood?
- Do charities bother to disseminate unstructured data on competitors?
- Do people actually bother meso farming on Reg servers?
- Does the no-snitch code of silence bother officers?
- Do you bother watching the Oscar nominations announcements?
- Should you even bother collecting frequent flyer miles?
- Why do pharmaceutical companies bother to find cures?
- Do embarrassing moments Bother you after they occur?
- Should monoglot medievalists bother with difficult languages?
- Should I bother learning about poststructuralist IR?