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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as a bother" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express that something is perceived as an inconvenience or annoyance.
Example: "I didn't want to ask for help, as a bother to my colleagues."
Alternatives: "as a nuisance" or "as an inconvenience."
Exact(7)
Treating them as such, and not as a bother, would go a long way.
"He views parties and all the formalities of politics as a bother.
Those who see technology as a bother might shell out $150 every eight years to upgrade.
Anything that gets in the way -- even a bona fide medical mystery -- is more often seen as a bother rather than a learning opportunity.
They can integrate safety information into the daily life of a lab not as a bother but as a useful tool for raising standards, and for spotting and avoiding problems.
Our patients also presented low sexual functioning and did not perceive this dysfunction as a bother.
Similar(53)
In his own time, the playwright reveals Bessie as more than a bother.
In their relations to others they could perceive themselves as being a bother.
But when returning to his house or to the Diet in the morning, this became a bother, as his car and driver had to negotiate the tangled warren before getting out of the district.
Let's do that now too, but, hmm, let's do it while she's sleeping so as not to be a bother.
She sees it as a paperwork bother more than a financial issue.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com