Sentence examples similar to common troubles from inspiring English sources

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The most common trouble a race car gets into is a spin, in which the rear of the car starts to come counterclockwise around the front, whether because somebody tapped it or because the driver went too hard into a corner.

The eccentricity is one of the most common trouble sources in the rotor of electrical machine.

Skinner confused by online world Commons trouble-maker Dennis Skinner could be heard grumbling in the chamber yesterday after Prime Ministers' Questions.

He was having trouble hearing, a common difficulty of bombing victims.

Given that NESARC purposely oversamples black and Hispanic respondents, and that marijuana arrests are among the most common legal troubles for these demographic groups, scientists said it seems possible that these groups could skew rates.

Trouble staying asleep is more common than trouble falling asleep for patients over age 40, probably because circadian rhythms tend to peak progressively earlier from adolescence to old age unless dementia begins.

In her version of alcoholic haute-Bohemia, it was also somehow "common" to trouble oneself with trivialities like regular meals.

It is the tenderness beneath the satire that enthralls Zoe Pilger From Greenham Common to the Troubles, the London riots to mad cow disease, the Hayward's ambitious new show explores the changing state of the nation over the past 70 years 17th Century painter is famous for his luminescent, voluptuous female nudes William Blake's influence as both visionary and revolutionary is felt to this day.

More common is having trouble staying asleep, which contributes to people having less of what doctors call sleep efficiency.

Mr. McKinney, the civilian contractor, said that even though the stranded passengers, for lack of a common language, had trouble communicating, "everybody's been pretty mellow".

The fact that related species have similar social structures, presumably because the genes for social behavior are inherited from a common ancestor, "spells trouble" for ecological explanations, Joan B. Silk, a primate expert at the University of California, Los Angeles, wrote in a commentary in Nature.

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