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The phrase "is causing trouble" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation where someone or something is causing problems or disruptions. Example: The new employee's constant lateness is causing trouble for the rest of the team.
Exact(28)
That is causing trouble for the present lot.
A bugbear is causing trouble on the Internet.
Some data suggests that that disconnect is causing trouble.
Its workaday incarnation, cockiness, is causing trouble for Bill Ackman, a modern-day hedge-fund titan.
ONCE more, the Philippines' chaotic politics is causing trouble for the economy.
I said 'prairie,' O.K.? Prairie N-word over here is causing trouble.
Similar(31)
The end-to-end model, which was designed for special data transmission in the early age of Internet, is causing troubles everywhere in nowadays content based web services.
The Polish who come here, all they do is cause trouble.
It has been causing trouble ever since.
Then don't be causing trouble.
The electronic voting machines in Cleveland were causing trouble again.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com