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"make him miserable" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It means to cause someone to feel unhappy or unhappy. You can use this phrase in situations where someone is causing another person to feel unhappy or miserable. For example: - The constant teasing from his classmates made him miserable. - She was determined to make him miserable after he broke her heart. - His strict parents' rules made him miserable. - The long hours and demanding workload at his job made him miserable. - She couldn't bear to see her best friend's boyfriend make her miserable.
Exact(8)
They'll make him miserable.
His name must make him miserable, as does the work of his conductor brother (Sven Ahlstrom, who happily finds notes to play beyond arrogance).
What actually happened: he forced me to play golf with him for hours when I visited on Saturdays, even though it seemed only to make him miserable.
In other words, it's about one person with more social status lording it over another person, over and over again, to make him miserable.
He reveals the whole marriage is a ploy by Tammy to once again make him miserable.
"[Prison officials] are pretty much doing whatever they can to make him miserable however they can.
Similar(52)
"Inwardness, calm, solitude make us less miserable".
Barrymore drank, which often made him miserable.
King Midas sought happiness in gold, and, in the end, that pursuit made him miserable.
Although he talks fluently about his father's death, he admits it makes him miserable.
It makes him miserable that his drug self-portraits have become the famous ones.
More suggestions(2)
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com