Cause to be agitated, excited, or roused.
Change the arrangement or position of.
Sinônimos
Examples for "disturb"
Examples for "disturb"
1As he said this, he felt a faint question disturb his thoughts.
2I shall not disturb Dr. Neebs; he looks to be concentrating deeply.
3It was far too early to disturb anyone at their evening meal.
4I hope these three won't disturb you very much in your work.
5He knows the house is empty; that nobody will disturb him there.
1Just to vex him, I had made a list of essential characteristics.
2I have no doubt he is deliberately setting out to vex us.
3They vex the ear a little, but they never reach the mind.
4It seemed this body was determined to vex ID at every turn.
5And now let us not vex ourselves any further with these conundrums.
1Barclays certainly needs some new people to shake up its brash culture.
2In April, HKEX finalised a major shake up of its listing regime.
3To really shake up the economy, the RBI should be much bolder.
4He vetoed a 2009 bill that aimed to shake up public media.
5But his attempts to shake up the 150-year-old organisation angered many members.
1Extending that to banks, however, is likely to stir up stiff opposition.
2A court case against file-sharing service Kazaa helped stir up the confusion.
3A soft answer turneth away wrath: but grievous words stir up anger.
4However, indirect influences could stir up unnecessary friction over very minor matters.
5I almost couldn't wait to see what we could stir up tomorrow.
1This will raise up France; it is a balm for many sorrows.
2Socialism seeks to pull down wealth; Liberalism seeks to raise up poverty.
3If We willed, We could raise up a warner in every village.
4Accounting that God is able to raise up even from the dead.
5The effect seemed truly magical-heendeavored to raise up his little body.