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The phrase "bother on" is not commonly used in written English
It may be a regional or colloquial expression, but it is not considered standard usage. Instead, "bother" is typically followed by a preposition such as "about" or "with," as in "I don't want to bother with that task right now." Here is an example of how "bother on" might be used in spoken or informal language: "I don't know why he keeps bothering on about that topic. It's not important."
Exact(26)
He's just a regular American guy, after all, and not the first one to get into a spot of bother on a summer trip abroad.
They did not even bother on Sunday.
His breathing was grand, not a bother on him.
He was up [after the fall] before I was and he was grand – there's not a bother on him.
Updated at 4.30pm BST 4.19pm BST Stenson has got himself into all kinds of bother on the 4th.
Until a minute before the interval Ireland appeared comfortable with Damien Duff and McGeady causing all sorts of bother on the flanks.
Similar(33)
A quarter of girls aged between nine and 16 say they've been "bothered" on the internet.
I've been warned that other trans students have been bothered on campus and nearly been assaulted.
Caesarian and induced labours are especially common on Fridays, say cynics, so that obstetricians need not be bothered on the weekends.
"If she gets hot and bothered on a date," Dr. Berman said about the daughter, "she can go home and self-stimulate, instead of getting pregnant".
Residents of Windsor, Ontario, however, have been bothered on and off for more than a year by a low hum — like the bass from a car stereo.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com