20 Verbs to Use for the Word bother

That would save a bother at the hotel (for Aunt Lilian knew I had heaps of American friends who came every year to Paris), yet no one would know where to search for me, even if they were inclined.

"C'est l'amour!" laughed Nina, "that makes all the bother and complications of our artificial state of existence!"

Do you want to drop the Lodger and come out as a Householder?Now you must know that I took this house of mine at Enfield, by an obvious domiciliary fiction, in my Sister's name, to avoid the bother and trouble of parish and vestry meetings, and to escape finding myself one day an overseer or big-wig of some sort.

" "But," the captain observed, "I must be assured that these passengers who are so anxious to cross the water are not men whose absence might cause any great bother.

'Never mind the bother, Duncan; let's hear what you want.'

But all this was vague and shadowy to her Even had "business" been less of a mystery, she was too much absorbed in her own affairs to project herself into her father's case; and she thought she was sacrificing enough to delicacy of feeling in sparing him the "bother" of Mrs. Spragg's opposition.

If you happen to get bored with your husband, or he has a cold in his head, or anything that gets on your nerves, or you suddenly fancy some other man, you have not got all the bother and subterfuge of taking him for a lover and chancing a scandal like in England.

I'm 'fraid enough of real cows, but they can't walk up-stairs like the dream cows canand, oh, I remember the dream I dreamed about the Dentist-man, after I had my tooth pulled, the one father gave me the dollar forand" "Bother!" said Rudolf.

It disorganises this household, it inflicts endless bother on people, but never you mind that!

"Why should Oaks and Rowlands and those other fellows kick up bothers, and give lines for the same thing?"

A buyer who drinks hates a whisky breath when he hasn't got one himself, and a fellow who doesn't drink never bothers to discover whether he's being talked to by a simple or a compound breath.

" "Why did you not tell me?" "Bother!

" "I don't think we need bother about the back part of the house for the present," Robinson said.

Oh, how shall KITSON educate the "kids," Or how shall HEADLAM discipline the mothers, If you, instead of doing what Law bids, Pay the poor creatures' fines and raise up bothers? Law, Sir, is Law, even to Magistrates, Not a mere chopping-block for maudlin charity.

iv yon Yankees could nobbut just see, Heaw they're clemmin' an' starvin' poor weavers loike me, Aw think they'd soon sattle their bother, an' strive To send us some cotton to keep us alive.

" Still Mr. BALFOUR, so I hear, Seldom goes further than "O dear!" While moments of annoyance draw "Bother" at worst from BONAR LAW.

What would the King and his daughters think if they saw you suckin' an old dudeen like that? KITTY 'Tis little bother any of us are to the King or his daughters, either, I'm thinking.

I'll be cussed If I'm a-going to stand such pesky bother From you strong-minded gals.

My first day or two at the sea is a little depressing; I miss the Christ Church interests, and haven't taken up the threads of interest here; and, just in the same way, my first day or two, when I get back to Christ Church, I miss the seaside pleasures, and feel with unusual clearness the bothers of business-routine.

He forgot the bothers of the morrow in this new interest.

20 Verbs to Use for the Word  bother