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22 Sentences With "made trouble"

How to use made trouble in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "made trouble" and check conjugation/comparative form for "made trouble". Mastering all the usages of "made trouble" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Because they just made trouble or what was the ...?
Instead, he began telling people at the precinct that Inserillo had made trouble for him, she said.
His obdurate stand may have made trouble for MACCIH, an anti-corruption agency in Honduras set up by the OAS.
When Republicans were in the majority, Mr. Jordan and his fellow conservatives made trouble for the Republican leadership, often balking at their legislative agenda.
"Whenever I see her on TV, I always think that North Korea had made trouble again," said Jun Seung-ho, who works at a travel agency in Seoul.
But nearly everyone agreed that Mr. Trump had made trouble, especially in criticizing Ms. Merkel, given her importance as a figure of stability in Europe and her campaign for re-election later this year.
Sanders, after all, appointed Cornel West — a distinguished scholar but also an embittered Obama hater with no institutional ties to the Democratic Party — to the platform committee, where he made trouble at a couple of meetings and then predictably endorsed Jill Stein.
After noisy objections from Carl Icahn, an activist investor (who also made trouble back in 2013 about the price at which Dell went private), they revised the terms last month to reflect a value of some $24bn for DVMT, some $14bn of it in cash.
Zhang's warning comes after the Chinese foreign minister seemed to blame the "some Western forces" for the mass protests in Hong Kong "They have made trouble in Hong Kong, stirred up opposition and tried to sabotage Hong Kong's stability and damage the implementation of one country, two systems," Wang Yi said at a press conference last week.
His family was of the Eastern Orthodox faith. Temish attended Corcoran High School, where he played football and was a member of the choir. He spoke Greek and Ukrainian fluently, and enjoyed skiing and hunting. He went by the name "Teddy," and was known as a quiet and reserved student who never made trouble and earned satisfactory grades.
"Trouble" is thus Lewis' first release in partnership with RCA Records. Sony Music made "Trouble" a global priority, making it supersede "Collide" as the album's lead single and focussing on promoting the song in the UK first before a worldwide release. A new version of "Trouble" was recorded to feature American rapper Childish Gambino and premiered on radio on 21 August 2012.
According to the Shakyamuni Buddhist Foundation founded by Miaotian, Miaochan cheated his master, destroyed his reputation, and apprenticed privately. Hence, the Foundation gave a verbal warning to Miaochan in 2012. After the incident of Chiang Shu-na in 2014, the Foundation found that Miaochan also used sorcery to cheat people, misled people, and made trouble among believers. Consequently, the Foundation decided to expel Miaochan from Zen.
By 1962, the design of NY 330 became antiquated. Despite attempts to rebuild the road, the winter decimated the structure of the highway and made trouble for local emergency authorities. The New York Department of Public Works' State Highway Department designed a new road that would be wide with shoulders from Guideboard Corners to Cooks Corners (NY 79). This road, making concessions to demolish as little private property as possible, made several 10% curves, the legal maximum.
Hagerman was an excellent and skilled orator and conversationalist, and was certainly a controversial figure. He made trouble for himself with intemperate remarks on many occasions, damaging his career prospects. He was a powerfully built man, both bumptious and aggressive, and on one occasion in Kingston horse-whipped the activist Robert Fleming Gourlay, in 1818. As popular as he was within the Family Compact (he was a particular favourite of John Colborne, 1st Baron Seaton), he was thoroughly hated by those outside the circle.
Wilkes > stated his mission, demanding that the priest surrender the church books, > give up the keys of the house and vacate the premises. Before the visitors > were aware of it, the priest reached to a bureau drawer, pulled out a > revolver, and pointing at the men said: 'Now you fellows have made trouble > enough in this congregation. I will have you understand this is my house and > I want you to get out at once or I will compel you to.' Wilkes didn't wait > to hear any more.
Puukkojunkkari (or häjy, Swedish: knivjunkare, translated to English as knife- fighter;Ylikangas, Heikki: Major fluctuations in crimes of violence in Finland - A historical analysis, Scandinavian Journal of History, volume 1, issue 1-4 1976, pp. 81-103 literal translation: "knife junker") was a term used of troublemakers who were active in the Southern Ostrobothnia region of Finland in the 19th century. Fights among puukkojunkkaris were common, and often resulted in homicide; one could even get stabbed at a funeral. Puukkojunkkaris usually made trouble at weddings, stole horses and circulated among towns and villages.
If a banner prince made trouble, the Qing government had the power to dismiss him immediately without worrying about his lineage. The second important factor in the taming of the once powerful Mongols was the "Yellow Hat" school of the Tibetan Buddhism. The monasteries and lamas under the authority of the reincarnating lama resident in the capital Beijing were exempt from taxes and services and enjoyed many privileges. The Qing government wanted to tie the Mongols to the empire and it was Qing policy to fuse Tibetan Buddhism with Chinese religious ideas insofar as Mongolian sentiment would allow.
Bergen's teammates appreciated his strong arm and hustling style of play, but relations between the catcher and the team soured following an altercation with Vic Willis in which Bergen inexplicably slapped him while eating breakfast. The team's mixed emotions were expressed by an anonymous Boston player quoted in the press: "He has made trouble with a good many of the boys and we just give him a wide berth. But he's a ballplayer, and once we get into a game, personal feelings are set aside in admiration of the artist, for such he is." Bergen's condition worsened in 1899, which led to internal turmoil for the Beaneaters.
Professor Traian Stoianovich described the Severian Slavs; a mix of Slavs and Slavicized formerly Turkic speaking Huns Some Severians settled in the territory of present-day northeastern Bulgaria, (Moesia Inferior, and Scythia Minor). According to Theophanes the Confessor, the Bulgars subjugated the so-called Seven Slavic tribes. One of these tribes, the Severeis, were resettled in the east "from the klisuras before Veregava" (), most likely the Rish Pass of the Balkan Mountains; while the other six tribes were resettled in the southern and western regions, as far the boundary with the Pannonian Avars. In 767, the Byzantines kidnapped the Severian prince Slavun, who had made trouble in Thrace, indicating they retained a tributary relationship with the Bulgars.
"Larson, 38; Tansill, 49 Dodd shared House's views and wrote in his diary that "The Jews had held a great many more of the key positions in Germany than their numbers or talents entitled them to."Larson, 38–39 Based on this view of the proper role of Jews in society, he advised Hitler in March 1934 that Jewish influence should be restrained in Germany as it was in the United States. "I explained to him [Hitler]," wrote Dodd, "that where a question of over-activity of Jews in university or official life made trouble, we had managed to redistribute the offices in such a way as to not give great offense.
N.O.B.) that advocated keeping migrating Californians out of nearby Oregon. According to Lesser Seattle and the KBO, immigration of newcomers into the Puget Sound region clogged the roads, spent too much money bidding up prices, did not understand the "NorthWest way of life", and generally made trouble. Watson periodically suggested actions that KBO members could take to make "immigrants" (perhaps especially Californians) uncomfortable, and, hopefully, encourage them to leave. Readers and others occasionally observed that it was all a sort of joke; Watson sometimes responded that people could think what they liked, but that he would continue to promote the KBO as one way to deal with the decrease in the quality of life in the Pacific Northwest and especially in Western Washington.
Concern about such sex discrimination was especially strong in Slough where the local party refused to even co-operate in selecting a candidate after having an AWS imposed. Another concern was that AWS were being used as a device to keep out certain men who might have made trouble for Tony Blair, Prime Minister at the time; then-Labour Party leader Tony Blair stated that AWS were "not ideal at all" in 1995. In December 1995, Peter Jepson and Roger Dyas-Elliott, prevented from standing on Labour shortlists because of their gender, challenged the policy in court. Supported by the Equal Opportunities Commission, they claimed that they had been illegally barred from applying to be considered to represent the party and that the policy contradicted Labour's policy of aiming to promote equality of opportunity.

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