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The phrase "to create nuisance" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in legal contexts or discussions about behavior that causes inconvenience or annoyance to others. Example: "The construction work next door has begun to create nuisance for the residents, leading to numerous complaints."
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What is less clear, however, is when — and to what degree — technology, regulation and public acceptance may come together to create nuisance-free security screening worldwide.
CHP (combined heat and power) systems offer significant primary energy-efficiency gains and emissions reductions, but they can have high upfront investment costs and create nuisance pollution within the urban environment.
This renewable food source can create "nuisance bears" that return frequently for food.
He said he also would urge the town to create a "nuisance fund" that would buy up properties like bars in residential areas.
Mr. Schwartz said that unless other tenants will confirm that a noisy tenant is very noisy, it will be difficult for the letter writer to convince a court that the upstairs neighbor is making enough noise to create a nuisance serious enough to warrant judicial intervention.
The average generation of MSW from urban cities in India estimated to have approximately 40 to 60%% organic matter could be recycled as compost (Rawat et al. 2013).The wastes are dumped in low-lying areas without any precautions and operational controls henceforth creating nuisance to the environment and human health (CPCB 2010).
The popularity of the pocket-sized transistor radio set adds to everybody's capacity both for enjoyment and for creating nuisances.
FOLLOWING two weeks of interrogation, eight British men were charged on August 17th with conspiracy to commit murder and to create a "public nuisance" by means of explosives, chemicals or radioactive materials.
Strange gaps in Bolt's free speech-at-all-costs mantra went unchallenged – like when he wondered out loud why "people can protest wherever they like" and why protesters feel the need to "create a great nuisance to other people".
The performer, whose real name is Earl Simmons, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to creating a nuisance when the police went to his Teaneck home in June 1999 to investigate a shooting.
"He has a history of creating nuisances," Mr. Bhagat said.
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