272 adjectives to describe trouble

" "I remember," commented Barnett, "that when you came aboard the South Dakota, you had a little trouble making Captain Arnold see it."

The Indians, he said, were also very thick on the Arkansas River, between Fort Dodge and Fort Larned, and making considerable trouble.

England was currently supposed in Germany to be seriously hampered by domestic troubles at homechiefly of course among the Irish, but also amongst the Suffragettes(!) and by widespread disaffection in India.

I shall be saved unnecessary trouble hereafter.

Necessity compelled him to his friends in a time of sore trouble.

I found her in great trouble, mental as well as physical, and her principal anxiety was that she was afraid it would be a long time before she would be able to use her hand and sign and seal the royal acts and decrees.

She had had some slight trouble with her nipples, but this was soon overcome.

Well, 'tis an endless trouble to have the Tuition of a Maid in love, here is such Wishing and Longing.

But even then the external dangers made the governor-general's post a very trying one, especially when internal troubles were equally rife.

" "No, son," returned the venerable personage, "I propose to occasion no such needless trouble to Apollo, or any other Divinity.

How could so much extra trouble be given to the servants?

She had a bad attack of some nervous trouble then which seems to have been the beginning of everything.

"Not real, dreadful trouble.

Often he watched Stafford moving moodily about his father's crowded rooms, with the impassive face which men wear when they have some secret trouble or anxiety which they conceal as the Spartan boy concealed the fox which was gnawing at his vitals; or Howard came upon him in the corner of a half-darkened smoking-room, with an expired cigar in his lips, and his eyes fixed on a newspaper which was never turned.

Cook says, "neither the cordage, canvas, nor indeed hardly any other stores used in the Navy, are equal in quality to those in general use in the merchant service"; and he relates how such failures have constantly resulted in "infinite trouble, vexation, and loss."

I'm gwine in dat town, an' ef any w'ite man 'sturbs me, dere'll be trouble,dere'll be double trouble,I feels it in my bones!"

It was useless trouble.

All these millions of hard-faced people, intent on their own prosperity or their own petty troubles, goaded me, I think, into a sort of silent fury.

She was trembling, and in acute trouble.

In the past the Germans have had constant trouble with the natives, not one tribe but has had to be visited by sword and flame and wholesale execution.

His habitual reserve and gloom would divest any accidental and momentary disclosure of his inward trouble of everything suspicious or unaccountable, which would have characterized such displays and eccentricities in another man.

Here we have a lesson to learn from Germany, for German statesmen, strangely enough, have taken immense trouble to make their policy a democratic one.

I had awful trouble in getting it.

This is of great service to those parents who go out to work; for by sending their children's dinners with them, they are enabled to attend to their employment in comfort, and the children, when properly disciplined, will be no additional trouble to the teacher, for they will play about the play-ground, while he takes his dinner, without doing any mischief.

He twisted himself away from his sister with a little grunt, and stood peevishly playing a moment with a couple of marbles; then suddenly darting aside, seized the boat in which Miss Delano was established, still struggling, but more feebly, with the mysterious trouble that held her in thrall; and with a strength with which one would hardly have credited his slight form, he pushed it off into the water.

272 adjectives to describe  trouble