Use trouble in a sentence
Sentences starting with trouble
- Trouble between the Mormons and the Gentiles of the community would make her unhappy. [13]
- Trouble is, I haven't got a safety-ring, and I'm certain to lose them. [11]
- Trouble and sorrow have put this in your mind. [11]
- Trouble slips away from him as rain is shaken from the coarse military cloak which he wore in the Parthian war, and therefore it cannot exert its purifying power. [10]
- Trouble and expense for Mr. Brant once more; and, besides, it was with the greatest difficulty that he succeeded in persuading the master to let the youth go unprosecuted for the theft. [5]
- Trouble does not enhance beauty, and what condemnation the Romans had heaped on the woman who meddled with war, the craft of man! [10]
- Trouble to remember. [9]
- Trouble is brewing. [5]
Sentences ending with trouble
- I guess if you was to say that to some of the lady ministers nowadays, you'd git yourself into trouble. [8]
- I will cure you because you are the person to whom the infamous wretch most ardently wished the sorest trouble. [10]
- Came out twenty years too soon,--that was the trouble. [6]
- We mane business, ye know; and the sooner ye put us on the scent of a V, the asier yell save yerself from a dale of trouble. [5]
- You got a wrong start, that's the whole trouble. [5]
- I knew there would be trouble. [5]
- I knew there would be trouble. [11]
- Why in the world did you have to go and make all this trouble? [9]
- Why shouldn't I work out my own trouble? [11]
- It is the word "our" that makes all the trouble. [5]
Short sentences using trouble
- What can trouble you? [9]
- He'll no trouble you greatly. [9]
- One day there was trouble. [11]
- Is he in trouble? [9]
- Will there be trouble? [11]
- What is the trouble? [11]
- Had she made trouble? [11]
- We had no trouble. [5]
- Sure sign of trouble. [5]
- You are in trouble. [11]
Sentences containing trouble two or more times
- Once, when there was trouble with the Chipp'ways, he went alone to their camp, and say he will fight their strongest man, to stop the trouble. [11]
- But while the trouble with the last century is to find authors to mention, the trouble of this would be to name all that we find. [3]
- It is always the way; words will answer as long as it is only a person's neighbor who is in trouble, but when that person gets into trouble himself, it is time that the King rise up and do something. [5]
- It was known that he was in trouble, but he had been in trouble before. [4]
- There was trouble, strange and dreadful trouble, here; and the wrenching thought had swept into his brain that he was the cause of it all, that he was to be the spring and centre of dreadful happenings. [11]
- In the case of the turkey she is badly mixed: she gives it a bone to be used in getting it into trouble, and she also furnishes it with a trick for getting itself out of the trouble again. [5]
- No trouble, pardingue, if no trouble, Dormy Jamais's a batd'lagoule and no need for father of you to hide in a place that only Dormy knows--my good! [11]
- Fleda had warned him of trouble, and that trouble had come! [11]
- Well, here I am in trouble again--my last trouble, and with the wife of a man that I respect and admire, not enough to keep my hands off his wife, but still that I admire. [11]
More example sentences with the word trouble in them
- You are giving yourself useless trouble, Jason, and I earnestly beg you not to disturb me any longer now, for a dark spot is already appearing on the roast. [10]
- We all feel your deep trouble with you; and we would hope, if we might, but your words deny us that privilege. [5]
- But I believe you'll find he left for the capital on the eleven o'clock, and if you take the trouble to inquire from Bedding you will probably learn that the Throne Room is bespoken for the session. [9]
- The trouble with you, my dear Hugh, is that you have never failed," she went on, "you've never had a good, hard fall, you've always been on the winning side, and you've never had the world against you. [9]
- The trouble with you, Honora, is that you want something badly very badly--and you haven't yet found out what it is. [9]
- If I could you would say you were nearly paid for the trouble you took. [5]
- I do hope you will have no serious trouble in Iowa. [7]
- I don't doubt you think it rather absurd that I should trouble myself about these matters. [6]
- And yet, once you start a mistake, the trouble is done and you never know what is going to come of it. [5]
- To be sure, you Romans trouble yourselves more about matters of law and administration than the culture of the arts or the subtleties of thought. [10]
- The trouble is, you only see one side of this question. [9]
- I cannot tell you now what my trouble is; but I can say that no other living woman has a claim upon me. [11]
- It will give you no trouble and is nothing unworthy of you, but it will comfort me. [2]
- May I trouble you for a match? [5]
- The trouble with you Chicago people is, that you think you are the best people down here; whereas you are merely the most numerous. [5]
- To ask whether you are of knightly lineage would be useless trouble, and should it come to a genuine sword-dance. [10]
- I must tell you all now, out of the depth of this trouble through which I am passing. [6]
- He was a wronged man, a man who had seen trouble, and that was enough for me. [5]
- I have not written a single line, and have not once thought of business, or care or human toil or trouble or sorrow or weariness. [5]
- Twenty of him wouldn't be worth the trouble he's makin'. [8]
- I wish you would learn of Everett what he would take, over and above a discharge for all the trouble we have been at, to take his business out of our hands and give it to somebody else. [7]
- A brighter person would have seen what the trouble was, earlier than I did, perhaps, but I saw it early enough for all practical purposes. [5]
- Not what you would call two notes in the same key, she and Crozier," he reflected as he told her she need not trouble about her luggage, and took charge of the checks for it. [11]
- No other creature would be so likely to trouble a person who had an antipathy to it. [6]
- And was it worth the trouble, anyway? [5]
- I began to wonder what the trouble was. [5]
- What in the woald is the trouble? [8]
- I find it without trouble, in the morning paper; a cablegram from Chicago and Indiana by way of Paris. [5]
- He found him without much trouble in his usual attitude, occupying one of the chairs in the corridor. [9]
- He learnt everything without any trouble and at the same time worked as hard as a poor man's son. [10]
- They were jubilant with vanity over their new grandeur and the illustrious trouble they were making. [5]
- That means trouble with the directors, the stockholders, and calls for explanations. [9]
- What's the trouble with him, that long, lank cadaver, old oil-derrick out of a job--who is that? [5]
- They sprang forward with dismay in their faces, and begged to know his trouble. [5]
- He had quarrelled with Bigot, and had conquered, but at great cost; for Bigot had such power, and the Governor had trouble enough to care for himself against Bigot, though he was Beaugard's friend. [11]
- When I've trouble with Belloc's firm it's because they act like dogs in the manger. [11]
- Now the trouble with an American paper is that it has no discrimination; it rakes the whole earth for blood and garbage, and the result is that you are daily overfed and suffer a surfeit. [5]
- His brow wrinkled with a sudden trouble. [11]
- Once he came with a ship to find, but there was trouble and he did not go on. [11]
- He said he wished the public would make trouble oftener--it would have a good effect. [5]
- Still, if you wish to go there, you will have no trouble about finding it if you follow the directions given by Robert Louis Stevenson to Dr. Conan Doyle and to Mr. J. M. Barrie. [5]
- It was not wise to invite trouble. [11]
- Yes, and I will surely come; for I know there's much trouble in store for me. [11]
- I hope they will not get into any trouble. [9]
- Susan Posey's trouble will be come at easily enough; but Myrtle Hazard floats in deeper water. [6]
- An English fisherman's wife said, "When a body was in trouble she didn't send her help, she brought it herself. [5]
- She was a widow, and rather poor; consequently she had seen trouble enough to enable her to feel for the unfortunate. [5]
- There was trouble wi' the lad-wi' him and Maister Robert at the Court; but I never knowed nowt o' the truth. [11]
- And this was why harried cats and outlawed dogs that knew him confidently took sanctuary under his chair in time of trouble. [5]
- To tell the whole truth is to bring fresh shame upon Mrs. Llyn and her daughter, and not to tell the whole truth is to take away my one chance of getting out of this trouble. [11]
- Those of us who, like Honora, believe in Providence, do not trouble ourselves with mere matters of dollars and cents. [9]
- But the man who knew of the terrible thing he had done, who had saved him from the consequences of that terrible thing, was in sore trouble, and this broke down the gloomy guard he had kept over his dread secret. [11]
- It is her whim; and when a lady is charming, an Intendant, even, must not trouble her caprice. [11]
- Fer a good while after thet stampede Lassiter milled we hed no trouble. [13]
- Scenes and occurrences which, to every appearance, are calculated to rend the heart with the profoundest emotions of trouble, do not fetter that exalted principle imbued in her very nature. [5]
- The loss, over which Biberli shook his head angrily, did, not trouble him. [10]
- They always deprecated, when there was trouble ahead. [5]
- You don't know what trouble is--you don't know what misery is--nor hunger! [5]
- Then we saw what the trouble was--at some time or other we had drifted down the wrong side of an island and followed a sluggish branch of the Rhone not frequented in modern times. [5]
- But not knowing what the trouble was, I could not be any help to him. [5]
- She'll believe--you know what she'll believe,--it'll trouble her. [9]
- I don't see what he wants to die for, after he's taken so much trouble to live in such poor accommodations as that crooked body of his. [6]
- What if this were the trouble with Maurice Kirkwood? [6]
- Most of them were still too good-humoured with drink to be dangerous, but all hoped for trouble at the Orange funeral on principle, and the anticipated strike had elements of "thrill. [11]
- Those latter days were days of bitter worry and trouble for the harassed Reformers. [5]
- I excused myself, went over to her, and said:--"Miss Caron, you are in trouble? [11]
- I can't very well spare steady young men like you, who have too much sense and too much patriotism to mix yourselves up with trouble makers. [9]
- It is not well nor right for a padre and a compadre to fight--there is trouble in Heaven over that. [11]
- Matters were going well enough, when trouble developed from an unexpected quarter. [5]
- I got along well enough as soon as I landed, and have had no return of the trouble since I have been back in my own home. [6]
- We found that we were not manly enough nor brave enough to do a generous action when there was a chance that it could get us into trouble. [5]
- We see that we was making trouble, so we went up again about a mile, to the cool weather, and watched them from there. [5]
- We found the way without any trouble, reached there before sundown, played three games of cribbage, borrowed a dug-out and pulled back six miles to the upper camp. [5]
- That was the way he got into trouble, and lost his valuable life. [4]
- He said he wasn't doing anything, just feeding his cow a bit: he wouldn't make me the least trouble in the world. [4]
- Here, or at Washington, I would not trouble myself with the oyster laws of Virginia, or the cranberry laws of Indiana. [7]
- Whatever his trouble was, that face had obscured it in a flash, and the pools of feeling far down in the depths of a lonely nature had been stirred. [11]
- Self-centered as Lise was, absorbed in her own trouble and present physical discomfort, this unaccustomed word from her sister and the vehemence with which it was spoken surprised and frightened her, brought home to her some hint of the terror in Janet's soul. [9]
- She realized there was trouble in the face of the man who all her life had been strangely near and dear to her. [11]
- The Naval Brigade was to go to Fort Monroe without trouble to the government, and must so go or not at all. [7]
- The only trouble was that the trip was too short. [5]
- Leicester, who now was playing the game as though it were a hazard for states and kingdoms, read the increasing trouble in her face; and waited confidently for the moment when in desperation she would lose her self- control and go to the Queen. [11]
- Oh, no, sleep was not for him; his trouble was too haunting, too afflicting for that. [5]
- His trouble now was in proportion to the force of his character. [11]
- And the matter was hidden from the Court and the people; for it was given out that Melvill's friend had died of some heart trouble. [11]
- The trouble, however, was genuine enough, Virginia's rival paper seized upon the chance to humiliate its enemy, and presently words were passed back and forth until nothing was left to write but a challenge. [5]
- The old gentleman was for going along with me, but I said no, I could drive the horse myself, and I druther he wouldn't take no trouble about me. [5]
- Old Gabriel Druse was emphatic in his encouragement, but his face reflected the trouble in that of his daughter. [11]
- His own guilt was causing him great mental trouble and, in fact, notwithstanding the arduous labour imposed upon him by the war, the most melancholy mood again took possession of him. [10]
- But if Gering was bent on trouble, why, there was the last resource of the peace-lover. [11]
- Besides, if there was any catastrophe, any trouble, coming, or possible, that might hasten it, or, at least, give it point. [11]
- Next moment he was alongside of me and I was telling him all my trouble and what had been happening to Marget and her uncle. [5]
- In that letter was a sentence which rang like a cry in my ears: "Oh, Hugh, I think these doctors know now what the trouble is, I think I know. [9]
- He said he was a scion of a ducal house in England, and had been shipped to Canada for the house's relief, that he had fallen into trouble there, and was now being shipped to Australia. [5]
- But that pie was a job; we had no end of trouble with that pie. [5]
- Now Miss Ottway was a good stenographer, she was capable, and a fine woman, but she never got the idea, the spirit of the mill in her as you've got it, and she wasn't able to save me trouble, as you do. [9]
- If you don't want any trouble you won't make any, and you'll take this young lady to her sister. [9]
- Thanks to Monsieur Vigo, his manners were charming and his hospitality gracious, and there was no trouble whatever about my passport. [9]
- With the other vessel Smith had trouble. [4]
- This pleased him very much, for of course we could have stepped back to the summit and put him to the trouble of bringing us home if we wanted to. [5]
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