This year the Party leadership went to great lengths to avoid trouble.
2
Millions have fled Middle Eastern trouble spots seeking sanctuary in Western Europe.
3
The trouble is that each situation is extremely complicated and very different.
4
A report last week by DataQuick Information Systems pointed to additional trouble.
5
Four police officers have been injured during trouble in Newry City today.
1
It's the increasing number of extreme weather events that directly bother pets.
2
They probably won't even bother to question her, she's so far gone.
3
The emissary didn't bother to wait for an answer to his question.
4
Strictly speaking, I should not have used the word 'bother', should I?
5
I'm sorry to bother you, but I need to ask you something.
1
However, this practice may result in unnecessary inconvenience and cost to women.
2
And the citizens, along with local businesses, have suffered inconvenience and loss.
3
We apologize for the inconvenience.' So I thought that was pretty good.
4
Many House Republicans regard it as a temporary inconvenience for Washington bureaucrats.
5
Which weighs more -the free speech right or the little inconvenience?
1
Was there anybody whom his presence there could in any way incommode?
2
Nay, he venomously resented them, though they had long ceased to incommode him.
3
Let me tell you, then, confidentially; it is because long marches would incommode me.
4
The weight is nothing, and it will not incommode you.
5
But the dress-coat will some day be too tight for him and incommode him.
1
The result will be putout to public comment for 15 days.
2
Any new proposals will of course be putout to public consultation.
3
However, feelers were putout, which soon led to my welcome release.
4
They're far better than what was putout there. TV: 1 p.m.
5
I really think that you have to putout a good product.
Uso de discommode en inglés
1
He laughed, and said he hoped it did not discommode my beautiful wife.
2
An air of breathlessness about Rachel seemed to discommode her friends.
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It didn't discommode him enough to stop him training yesterday.
4
None of their thrusts drew blood or seemed to discommode the creature in the least.
5
Paschal Donohoe determined that there would be no nasty surprises at all, nothing to discommode people.
6
This ought not discommode Ireland too much.
7
Sorry to discommode you, my dear.
8
Why should we discommode each other?
9
Thus he had no abiding commitment to this United Nations mischief; it was mainly a challenge, to discommode Fate.
10
Bud will drive so as not to disturb Cradd or William in their Heathen pursuits or discommode Rufus' disposition.
11
Pray do not discommode yourself?
12
He buttoned his velveteen calzoneros down nearly to his ankles, so that their leathern bottoms might not flap open and discommode him.
13
For this end it was necessary to discommode myself of my cloak, and of the volume which I carried in the pocket of my cloak.
14
Then he said, with a clearly modulated and rather mincing articulation: 'Would it discommode you to contribute elsewhere a coin with a somewhat different superscription?'
15
The limitations caused by the wearing of a body also discommoded him.
16
Maurice bowed stiffly across the table; Herries replied in kind, without discommoding himself.