Disturb in mind or make uneasy or cause to be worried or alarmed.
Synonyms
Examples for "trouble "
Examples for "trouble "
1 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 Conclusion: Bipolar disorder is more common in family practice than previously believed.
2 However, the relationship between cocaine use disorder and social decision-making remains unclear.
3 Background: Bipolar disorder is among the 10 most disabling medical conditions worldwide.
4 Some experts suggest this is a new form of body dysmorphic disorder .
5 Assessment: Bipolar 1 disorder , current episode manic, severe, with psychotic features; PTSD.
1 Emphasising individual responsibility doesn't need to distract from corporate and federal responsibility.
2 Every news cycle tells the other story: women's short skirts distract men.
3 Rags were often used to help facilitate feeding and distract the baby.
4 Long enough to distract them from the real problems they were facing.
5 Political leaders could use it to distract people from their economic mismanagement.
1 In the short term, however, there is simply disquiet about the Bulgarian.
2 Conservative MPs voted with the government but many subsequently expressed their disquiet .
3 The Taoiseach is also facing growing disquiet among backbenchers over the plan.
4 The conversation with Wednesday had left Shadow with a sense of disquiet .
5 Some other companies have also voiced disquiet over the implications of independence.
1 Rarely need the complaisance that audacity evokes perturb the diffident man; since
2 Once more Pike ignored the younger man's clumsy attempt to perturb him.
3 The information did not perturb her, and her coolness was a challenge.
4 In the summer she came home like this, sweet-natured and impossible to perturb .
5 However, one detail perturbed him: suppose autopsies revealed the presence of arsenic?
1 The nervous, excitable temper has helped the fret and cark of ambitious life.
2 Well, to be plain, out of the Stewart cark and moil!
3 Hatred and cark and care, what place have they
4 As for the top 10 songs to play at my funeral when I cark it?
5 We only play stuff we want to play before we cark it, the great string trios.
1 All of these questions about flares were obviously beginning to unhinge him.
2 Everything seemed designed to unhinge the mind and make the cat wretched.
3 Grace has a secret with the power to unhinge her precariously balanced family.
4 They started to pass and move faster in an effort to unhinge Everton.
5 With wings outstretched, unhinge themselves off the ledge, into flight .
6 Others, such as caffeine, unhinge an insect's nervous system and kill its appetite.
7 Iraq still has security, political and logistical challenges that could unhinge its ambitious plan.
8 More importantly, the Volkswagen scandal has the potential to unhinge the German economic model.
9 If I once give way to favour or sentiment, I unhinge my whole system.
10 But all this is but a vain imagination, fit only to unhinge weak minds.
11 I saw myself unhinge the grip, one numbed finger at a time, and move.
12 Ireland's injury woes, and especially at tight-head prop, continue to unhinge their World Cup preparations.
13 Id have two charges in your behind before you could unhinge that jaw of yours.
14 When she put on her superior, resigned airs, it was enough to unhinge an angel.
15 But the sight of the gun didn't unhinge Tony.
16 I believe it was that which in a very great measure helped to unhinge her mind.
Other examples for "unhinge"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term unhinge
Verb
Indicative · Present