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15 Sentences With "taking the trouble"

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

One is about taking the trouble to identify correctly the gender that people are presenting in public.
Out of sight, out of mind, I guess, though I couldn't figure out why people were taking the trouble to unfollow us.
By taking the trouble to go to the other store, you can save 503 percent on the headphones and only 250 percent on the speakers.
There is no automatic process through which he deflates, and no winnowing magic through which he can be defeated without someone actually taking the trouble to defeat him.
It is not uncommon anymore for anti-Trump conservatives like National Review's Charles C. W. Cooke to perfunctorily assert that "Obama begat Trumpism" without taking the trouble to explain what Obama did, other than simply to be who he is, to cause nearly half of the Republican electorate to become spellbound by a bigoted demagogue.
The Histoire des deux Indes lacks consistency in its style: Raynal limited himself to collecting articles provided by friends and pieces borrowed from existing published texts, without taking the trouble to rework them.
However, it is misleading, since the spiral of Proposition 9 is the equiangular spiral, which he does not recognise as a Cotes's spiral at all. Unfortunately, subsequent authors have followed Whittaker's lead without taking the trouble to verify its accuracy.
They agree and Aanchal takes them back. They arrive at the Tyagi household where the family members were worried about the children. Siddharth doesn't be at home as he was looking for the kids so Aanchal meets the other family members. They apologise to her for taking the trouble to bring them back, but Aanchal dismisses this.
Steven Poole in his Guardian review wrote that "Hitchens should at least be applauded for taking the trouble to provide an amusing index, a duty shirked by too many authors." The index was the subject of a full-page parody by Craig Brown in the magazine Private Eye.'Peter Hitchens: the index', 'as told to Craig. Brown', Private Eye, no.
" (Lai 1998:210) Ge Hong quotes his teacher Zheng Yin's explanation that poverty forces Tao-shi ("Taoist practitioners") seeking hsien techniques to engage in the difficulties and dangers of alchemy. > Then I asked further, "Why should we not eat the gold and silver which are > already in existence instead of taking the trouble to make them? What are > made will not be real gold and silver but just make-believes." Said Cheng > Chun in reply, "The gold and silver which are found in the world are > suitable for the purpose.
William IV originally balked at the proposal, which effectively threatened the opposition of the House of Lords, but at length relented. Before the new peers were created, however, the Lords who opposed the bill admitted defeat and abstained from the vote, allowing the passage of the bill. The crisis damaged the political influence of the House of Lords but did not altogether end it. A vital reform was effected by the Lords themselves in 1868, when they changed their standing orders to abolish proxy voting, preventing Lords from voting without taking the trouble to attend.
By dint of his office, he was also an ex officio Regent of the University of Michigan. He was described as having "extra ordinary gifts, and with them the vices that were common to many of his predecessors and contemporaries, — intemperance and unthrift", and that he was "keen to detect in a record some technical defect that would enable him to get rid of the case without taking the trouble to study it". In one noted case, Twitchell v. Blodgett, he stated that he "could not allow to judicial doubts more potency than to legislative certainty".
He was a natural with the native troops, taking the trouble to know their language and culture, and respected by them for his professionalism as a soldier. He equally gained the confidence of the local Pathan tribesmen, of whom he had a natural curiosity and talent for dialogue. He had an inherent instinct for exploring different views and cultures, born out of an engaging charm, as well as an instinct for both understanding and treating all on an equal footing – but still able to retain his own authority. These unusual qualities remained with him throughout his career.
Peugeot 203 4-Door Berline (1948 - 1952 version) The 203 was the first monocoque bodied production Peugeot. The car was eye catchingly modern and bore a marked resemblance to the American Chevrolet Fleetline fastback, although its wind cheating profile also reflected the streamlining trend apparent in some of Europe's more modern designs, including some of Peugeot's own 402 model, from the 1930s. The 4-door saloon was the major seller, but from 1950 a commodious 4-door version (Commerciale) and a 6-seat (Familiale), with three rows of seats, were also offered on a wheelbase lengthened by to . By taking the trouble to extend the wheelbase for the estate and family versions, the company set a pattern which they would follow with several succeeding generations of large family Peugeot estates such as the 404 and 504.
13-4 > The superiority of reward is not here the consequence of competition, but of > its absence: not a compensation for disadvantages inherent in the > employment, but an extra advantage; a kind of monopoly price, the effect not > of a legal, but of what has been termed a natural monopoly... independently > of... artificial monopolies [i.e. grants by government], there is a natural > monopoly in favour of skilled labourers against the unskilled, which makes > the difference of reward exceed, sometimes in a manifold proportion, what is > sufficient merely to equalize their advantages. If unskilled labourers had > it in their power to compete with skilled, by merely taking the trouble of > learning the trade, the difference of wages might not exceed what would > compensate them for that trouble, at the ordinary rate at which labour is > remunerated. But the fact that a course of instruction is required, of even > a low degree of costliness, or that the labourer must be maintained for a > considerable time from other sources, suffices everywhere to exclude the > great body of the labouring people from the possibility of any such > competition.

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