How To Use Botheration In A Sentence

  • botheration," and that Pallas folk are going to "have their own" again, as was once said of a Stuart king, who did not get it nevertheless. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • To cap it all, the ombudsman ordered the DTI to apologise and to pay compensation "for the expense and botheration they have been caused".
  • Oh botheration! I can't find my keys anywhere.
  • You have a vague sensation of a vague sensation, and you know that while this is a minor botheration, you will feel immensely relieved when it's concluded.
  • This can be considered as a great advantage as it reduces your botheration in relation to the claims, along with saving your time.
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  • At the same time, the ones with defective hearts are the personnel who blindly and stupidly treat the passengers as an inconvenience and botheration. I Declare Myself a No-Fly Zone
  • The others, having reached the door, turned round, and finding that the youth did not follow them, one of them called to him with a tone of some authority; whereupon the young man rose, and, pronouncing half audibly the word "botheration," rose and followed them. Lavengro the Scholar - the Gypsy - the Priest
  • But it is lot of botheration to cook breakfast so early in the morning.
  • The only botheration was that he did not stand to gain much by doing well in the Masters.
  • Being injury prone was a big botheration as he acquired a reputation of being unfit.
  • The usual botheration en route; love those people who make a point of getting in front of you, then drive below the posted limit. April – 2009 – The Bleat.
  • Every botheration you feel is of your own making: never blame others for this universe as it is.
  • I had mulled over mentioning it to her and decided against it, because though she is supposed to be a friend, as time goes by, I find that she is more a botheration to the spirit than anything else…
  • Oh, it was worth while to have/[Page 233]/spent four days in parsimony; to have been bitten with bugs; to have been irritated with fuss and humbug, and last of all to have been done out of my travelling expenses back! it was worth while to have had all this botheration to refresh my sense of all my mercies. Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle
  • The fact is that the LSC's mistakes were simply human errors, compensation for which was adequately reflected in the offer of £50 by way of botheration payment.
  • Part of my botheration sprang from guilt, over not getting to my mail in a timely fashion, or getting to letters before they sank in the spam pits.
  • There was little botheration about their ranks.
  • It would be possible, of course, to build a group of 3 or 4 or more sentences, each of which in isolation is perfectly acceptable, but which as a group leads us into botheration again.
  • The complete failure to adhere to any semblance of plausible physical law — I am sure neither momentum nor energy are conserved for more than 30 seconds after the titles conclude — far trumps for me any notional botheration about which came first, civilized Mayans or civilized Babylonians. The Volokh Conspiracy » Unnecessary Falsehoods:
  • As far as botheration currently goes, Mr Banker rates about a 2 and the latest reactionary strike against equality, and actual lives being hurt, a 95. Another quick update
  • The others, having reached the door, turned round, and, finding that the youth did not follow them, one of them called to him with a tone of some authority; whereupon the young man rose, and, pronouncing half audibly the word "botheration," rose and followed them. Lavengro The Scholar, the Gypsy, the Priest
  • Oh botheration! I can't find my keys anywhere.
  • The assurance of the sites you are ambidextrous with isto ensure you get the appropriate thing, as well be accustomed with the botheration is apparently the fitting. Think Progress » Don Blankenship Called Safety Regulators ‘As Silly As Global Warming’
  • And as the last few miles had shown, the Defiant wasn't a great winter car - the defroster took forever, and shifting was a botheration.
  • ‘We get eight per cent commission, and have no other botheration,’ says Mr. Moosa.
  • Part of France's botheration could be the absence of new adolescent aptitude.
  • In fact, perhaps what is lurking underneath all your botheration is the idea that a Muslim has shot his fellow soldiers, this has terrible ramifications that you want to leave to others to “parse,” and none of these conclusions are politically correct. NSFW: After Fort Hood, another example of how ‘citizen journalists’ can’t handle the truth

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