How to use "trouble" in a sentence

Sentences

Immediately I know this is trouble but it's too late to go back

The Captain looked in trouble

She was crying, and I knew that I was in trouble again

And I was in trouble, but I was lucky

There was a lot of trouble there

But it got me into more trouble

'He won't be any trouble, Mr Tribble,' I said.

Schwartz did not want any trouble so he crossed to the other side of the street

They waited nervously while the man studied the bill carefully, expecting him to complain or cause trouble

You're probably in trouble with the police, or you're in debt, and you've run back to me for help

'Now you must promise me something for my trouble,' she said

"We understand that hundreds of local businesses are in serious trouble because of you and this bank," I say

There's something about Needles, something about trouble on Route Sixty-Six, and he tries to listen, but the signal is weak.

In Canada, in the mountains, when you are cold you are okay, but when you are warm, you are in trouble.

"Be honest now, or there might be trouble for you."

If the government finds out that messages are getting through the force field and passing across the city boundary, there could be big trouble."

I knew he hated any kind of trouble with the servants.

'I'm so sorry,' I said, 'I never thought Robert would get into trouble.'

'There must be a ship in trouble in the bay.'

He's been in trouble with the police many times

'There won't be any trouble at the inquest

They might make trouble.'

'We are sorry to trouble you, Dr Baker,' Colonel Julyan said

Everyone assured her there was no chance of trouble

Maybe a large family isn't such a wise idea these days, what with the economy in trouble and all the turmoil in the world

"No trouble."

"If your husband's likely to cause trouble, then we'll move fast and without fanfare

He spent an hour and a half in his library, paging through legal casebooks, boning up on precedents for the exhumation of a body that, as the court had put it, "was to be disinterred in the absence of a pressing legal need, solely for humane reasons, in consideration of certain survivors of the deceased." Elliot didn't think Harold Kennebeck would give him any trouble, and he didn't expect the judge to request a list of precedents for something as relatively simple and harmless as reopening Danny's grave, but he intended to be well prepared

"Doesn't smell like there's trouble here," she said.

She had trouble holding the magazine steady enough to read.

Then as he had signed for the rental car and picked up the keys from the night clerk, he had kept one hand in a pocket of his coat, gripping the handgun he'd taken off Vince in Las Vegas - but there was no trouble.

"I think I can find it without any trouble

If there's any trouble, you might get in the way of it."

This wasn't insurance against the unforeseen; this was simply prudent planning for the trouble they could foresee all too well.

"The government wouldn't go to all the trouble of hiding this joint out here just to house a handful of researchers or whatever

"Put the gun aside, sit down, and don't make any trouble."

They'll have enough trouble believing that I did it alone..

Helene, I am having trouble

I heard Andre moving in the next room, and then a strange sucking noise, as though he had trouble drinking his milk.

'There's been some trouble about him,' said Lettice

Was that the trouble?'

All this trouble made me forget.'

I am in great trouble and would like your advice.

I hoped it would get her into trouble.' I told her that I would return the earring to Anne and say nothing about how I had found it.

I remember how I sat there in the blackness, not suspecting the meaning of the tiny light I had seen and all the trouble that it would cause me

I did not take the trouble to touch them

After a lot of trouble, I managed to break into a pub and find some food and drink

And I would save myself even the trouble of killing myself

The trouble had ended

I must admit that the trouble and danger of our time have left a continuing sense of doubt and fear in my mind

Harris said, 'You don't have any trouble sleeping, George

That night Harris had trouble sleeping

The trouble is, her big sister - sensible, married Connie - won't like it at all...

I may get into trouble.'

In her eyes, Mensar-Arthur and everything that went with him meant trouble for her sister and for her own feelings too