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Discover LudwigThe phrase "create a fuss" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It means to make a big deal or cause a commotion about something. Example: "Sophia always seems to create a fuss whenever things don't go her way."
Exact(9)
Larry Bird did not want to create a fuss.
"I thought we shouldn't create a fuss," he admits.
Who wants to create a fuss, properly crunch the numbers and stand in its way?
Sometimes Tweedledee will create a fuss in the tent and the onlookers will press toward his stand.
We'd often spoken about it, but could never come up with a plan that wouldn't create a fuss.
Col. Don Hughes, the military aide who has assisted the President since his Vice Presidential days, speculated to a re porter last night that one reason the Presi dent avoided the Rose Bowl today was that he did not want to create a fuss or upstage the astronauts, who served as marshals in the annual Rose Bowl parade.
Similar(51)
He wasn't one for creating a fuss.
"It works discreetly, without creating a fuss," said Rafael Pineiro, the assistant chief in charge of the department's Management and Information Systems Division.
Families illegally resident in the country, who have exhausted their rights under the law, are often sent home without creating a fuss.
But in July, Mr. Solana created a fuss by suggesting that the United Nations impose a solution if the sides could not agree.
"Jewish Museum Show Looks Nazis in the Face and Creates a Fuss" (Critic's Notebook, Jan . 29 summarizes the Jewish Museum's idea for a forthcoming show as an opportunity to exhibit works that focus "not on the victims but on the perpetrators for a change".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com