Sentence examples for trouble notes from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Outsiders who try to negotiate London's planning system often get in trouble, notes Toby Courtauld, Great Portland's boss.

"It's easier to keep you out of trouble than it is to get you out of trouble," notes Viken.

"If this company was in trouble," notes a Merrill Lynch analyst in Manila, "they would have closed the deal much earlier".

Similar(57)

That suggests there could be a fight tonight, but Devils Coach Larry Robinson, like his players, said he didn't expect any trouble, noting that the Hatcher-Sykora incident occurred last season.

"Every person who sees 'Batman' is going to say, 'Boy I'd like to see New York.' " Some residents near the bridge said the short-term nuisance was worth the trouble, noting that the New York City Marathon had been just as disruptive a weekend earlier.

Giving an early take on the latest Streams agreement, professor Eerke Boiten, who conducts research in data privacy and ethics, suggested that "lots of lessons" have been learned by DeepMind after its Royal Free collaboration ran into trouble noting, for example, that the Somerset agreement includes an "explicit statement that data will not be linked".

The trouble, noted the London Sunday Time writer who got that interview, was that "Ella needs her audience almost as much as they adore her".

Samsung's latest top-end smartphones the Galaxy S7, S7 Edge (find here) and the troubled Note 7 are rated to IP68 standards, and so are technically more protected against water ingress.

A 2011 report to the European Parliament listed a catalog of troubles, noting that Galileo had been particularly blighted in its early years by a familiar problem: political pressure from individual countries to skew the project in favor of their own companies and other immediate interests.

They do more hiring (or less sacking) and less automation.I elaborated on the story in a little theory of recent troubles, noting what the story implied for the share of income flowing to labour:[I]n general, the benefits of growth will flow to high-income workers and owners of capital.

He needs extra time on tests and has trouble taking notes in lectures.

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