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"make mischief" Antonyms

43 Sentences With "make mischief"

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

"America First" is good for Putin, who continues to make mischief worldwide.
Russia, whose threat Mr Trump refuses to take seriously, will be emboldened to make mischief.
He was learning to make mischief, and it was all a bit of a mess.
NATO is a consensus organization, and Turkey could make mischief by thwarting its decision-making.
From what we already know about Russia's invading voter databases, it is eager to make mischief.
The scope for Mr Trump to make mischief in London this week is not confined to NATO.
The idea is pretty much to give Parliament less time, so it has less opportunity to make mischief.
It was set on the outskirts of town, far enough away that city folks could feel free to make mischief.
Facebook says there is no evidence that employees used the passwords to make mischief, says Brian Krebs, who broke the news.
II, two albums of ambient ethereality he claimed were inspired by lucid dreaming, the man decided he wanted to make mischief.
If it&aposs our bottom line, it&aposs dead on arrival and then provides a pretext for John Bolton to make mischief.
Toni Getting back to Roger Stone, I suspect that he and Trump could make mischief after a loss in a very close election.
But he also insisted it wouldn't make much of a difference in terms of Iran's capacity to make mischief in the Middle East.
He perceived Moore's electoral strength (he led polls of the primary all along) and saw an opportunity to make mischief with the GOP establishment he so loathed.
Russia could have been trying to influence the election on behalf of Trump, if they carried it, or to make mischief more generally and create chaos during the election.
And, yes, techniques like these are already being used to make mischief, from people impersonating journalists on Twitter with AI-generated profile pictures to online tools for generating fake profiles yourself.
It wasn't really news that Russian agents operate within the US and try to establish links with wealthy and influential Americans, nor that Russian hackers routinely make mischief on social media networks.
He now will make mischief for generations in the minds of millions of people, not just in Iran but among Shia in different countries inclined to resist America, Israel and Sunni sectarianism.
Eleven states held annual Republican conventions or party leadership meetings Saturday, offering a platform for those who still object to Donald Trump as their party's standard-bearer a prime opportunity to make mischief.
They are the most visible examples of Russia's aggressive attempt to use our free press to make mischief in our political process — lending legitimacy to a network that has at times trafficked in Sept.
These cases subject Trump to an entirely different legal regime from the Mueller probe, which is a mixture of law and politics that allows Trump to try to leverage his political power and boorish personality to make mischief.
Their silent "Out of the Inkwell" shorts are delirious metafictions that show Max at work in his office, drawing a small clown who finds ways to escape the sheet of paper and make mischief in the outside world.
The efficacy of the EU has been roundly challenged, destructive nativist and nationalist sentiments have taken root, Turkey has become not a buffer for Europe but a problematic partner, and Russia has been given new opportunities to make mischief.
The wildest of the bunch, including "The Tiger," by William Blake, "Eletelephony," by Laura E. Richards, and "Humming-bird," by D. H. Lawrence, can't be tamed by a single spread; page flaps open to allow animals to prowl, make mischief and fly.
Getting rid of Mr Johnson, for example, and replacing him with a younger talent would undoubtedly be a good thing for Britain's foreign policy, but it would disturb the balance of power in the cabinet and give Mr Johnson a licence to make mischief or even bring down the government.
A new working paper finds that after controlling for the long-term decline in crime and seasonality (teenage crime rates tend to fall in the summer as more go off on holiday), 14-year-old Danes were no less likely to make mischief after the change to the penal code than they were before.
Tom and Lucy Little both insist on doing good deeds for big people, including a blind woman. One time they tried to find a Grandma Little for Grandpa. They can make mischief around the place.
The story takes place in Provencal France, where a group of young boys ("mistons" roughly translates "brats") are infatuated with a beautiful young woman. Jealous of her passionate affair, they conspire to make mischief for the woman and her boyfriend.
Having found the mischief they proceeded to make mischief with the words of the statute. They remodelled the statute, by taking things out and putting things in, in order to fit the "mischief" and "defect" as they had found them.Elmer Driedger, The Construction of Statutes. Second Edition.
The goblins of the title, the kallikantzari, live beneath the ground, trying to chop up the tree that holds up the earth. When it is nearly down, they know it is Christmas and come up to make mischief; they are driven back down at Epiphany, when the Greek Orthodox priests bless the waters.
This ritual is linked to the Bhavishya Purana which describes an incident involving a rakshashi (giant) named Dhundh during the reign of king Raghu. As the Guru Vashishtha advised, people kindled fires at various spots to keep the demoness away. Thus the Lord's name and fire kept the demoness away. So on this day children make mischief.
French became increasingly critical of Haig's Western Front Offensives.Heathcote, p. 134 One biographer writes that "French's office at Horse Guards became a clearing house for gossip from France". French was critical of the choice of Rawlinson to command the Somme and in August 1916 Robertson warned Haig that "Winston, French and various "degommed people" are trying to make mischief".
Betty leaves her pet Pudgy home alone with three adorable little kittens. As soon as Betty is out the door, the kittens begin to make mischief, turning the house into shambles. When Betty returns, she assumes the damage was caused by Pudgy, and punishes the innocent pup. The guilty kittens emerge from hiding and confess by singing the title song.
She intended to prevent them from having, in Brantôme's words "loysir á mal faire" (free time in which to make mischief). In the Ballet Comique de la Reine, 1581, a fountain chariot carried Queen Louise and her ladies and musicians. Engraving by Jacques Patin. Catherine also maintained about eighty alluring ladies-in-waiting at court, whom she allegedly used as tools to seduce courtiers for political ends.
Following an eventful summer at the beach and the Spanish countryside, Celia's mother, with some help from her sister-in-law Julia, convinces her husband to have the girl sent off to a convent, where they hope she'll learn discipline and good behaviour. Once at the school with the nuns, Celia continues to make mischief and form many chaotic events at the convent, often with the help of other girls.
He returned to the screen only occasionally in later years, for such roles as Frédéric Chopin's teacher in A Song to Remember (1945). In 1946, he starred in a rare comic performance, Angel on My Shoulder, playing a gangster whose early death prompts the Devil (played by Claude Rains) to make mischief by putting his soul into the body of a judge. His new identity turns the former criminal into a model citizen.
The book is about a young lad, Nils Holgersson, whose "chief delight was to eat and sleep, and after that he liked best to make mischief". He takes great delight in hurting the animals in his family farm. Nils captures a tomte in a net while his family are at church and have left him home to memorize chapters from the Bible. The tomte proposes to Nils that if Nils frees him, the tomte will give him a huge gold coin.
The spread of fasad is a major theme in the Quran, and the notion is often contrasted with islah (setting things aright). Terms derived from the verbal root f-s-d appear in a number of Quranic verses. The verb afsad (to cause fasad) appears, for example, in chapter 2 (Al-Baqara), verse 11-12, > When it is said to them: "Make not mischief on the earth," they say: "Why, > we only Want to make peace!" Of a surety, they are the ones who make > mischief, but they realise (it) not.
General Henry Wilson reported Spears as 'one to make mischief'. At the first meeting of the Supreme War Council in December 1917, Spears took the role as a master of ceremonies, interpreting and acting as a go-between. In January 1918, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel and was told he would be made a brigadier-general – the rank that he retained after the war. However, one month later he feared for his career when his enemy, Henry Wilson, replaced General Sir William Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff.
A "small minority" viewed this verse as applying to apostates in general. This verse follows verses 26-31 which refer to the incident in which Qabil (Cain), son of Adam, killed his brother Habil (Abel). Those who cause mischief in the land (yufsiduna fi al-ard) are counted as "the losers" in Al-Baqara, verse 27: > Those who break the covenant of Allah after ratifying it, and sever that > which Allah ordered to be joined, and (who) make mischief in the earth: > Those are they who are the losers. – The word "losers" indicates being bereft of something, and can also mean "being lost", in the sense of losing one's way or one's self.
The king very reluctantly agreed to allow Crown Prince Umberto to become the lieutenant general of the realm with all the powers of the king, but sought in exchange a promise that the ACC impose censorship of criticism of the House of Savoy, a demand that Mason-MacFarlane rejected outright. When Victor Emmanuel appointed his son lieutenant general of the realm, he did so with bad grace, predicting that this would allow the Italian Communists to come to power on the grounds that his son was not qualified to exercise power. In a report of their last meeting, Mason-Macfarlane wrote that "the king seems to have tried to make mischief to the end".Mack Smith, Denis Italy and Its Monarchy, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989 p.330.
The Duke of Wellington once told Charles Greville that George IV had said of Ernest's unpopularity, "there was never a father well with his son, or husband with his wife, or lover with his mistress, or a friend with his friend, that he did not try to make mischief between them." According to Bird, Ernest was the most unpopular man in England. Political cartoon supporting the Reform Act; King William sits above the clouds, surrounded by Whig politicians, below Britannia and the British Lion cause the Tories (Ernest, second from left) to flee. The Duke's influence at Court was ended by the death of George IV in June 1830 and the succession of the Duke of Clarence as William IV. Wellington wrote that "the effect of the King's death will ... be to put an end to the Duke of Cumberland's political character and power in this country entirely".
Davis got brief warning of the imminent danger when Ali's followers opened fire on Davis's sentries, and managed to get his family up onto the terraced roof of his property, which was reached from a narrow staircase ascending through the ceiling. He had not time to gather weapons beyond a pike, but over the course of 90 minutes managed to fend off attempts by Ali's followers to gain access to the roof by judicious jabbing of anyone getting within a pike's-length. Wazir Ali appears within this timescale to have decided to move on to the centre of Benares, and Davis's house was eventually cleared by members of his Indian police force together with sepoys. As news of events spread, the European population of the town hid themselves away as best they could, but Wazir Ali and supporters had little time to make mischief - though they managed to kill a Mr. Hill, a European shop-keeper, and set fire to a number of properties - before a Cavalry detachment under General Erskine arrived in the town at about 11am.

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