[ UK /bˈɒðəd/ ]
[ US /ˈbɑðɝd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. caused to show discomposure
    refused to be fazed by the objections
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How To Use bothered In A Sentence

  • It bothered me a little that I didn't have a pickup, and I couldn't see doing much off road driving with my Mustang fastback.
  • Are you bothered by nagging aches and pains? The Sun
  • He doesn't seem too bothered about the things that are written about him in the papers.
  • He is an ordinary bloke who is not too bothered about his clothes.
  • Now, whenever I go out on the porch I remember how rusty and pitted the railings used to look and how it bothered me, and the several hours I spent sandpapering it smooth, then the three coats of brown Rustoleum I applied, and now I'm watching it get whiter and cleaner with every new layer of paint I apply. A Productive Day
  • I am "unbothered" by the "lack of judgment" that you refer to because I don't see it as a lack of judgment. Obama Issues New Orders On Afghanistan
  • In theory, we were going to walk up the thousand steps, but neither of us could be bothered.
  • There was nothing that bothered him more than seeing his friends in bad moods, for he knew what it felt like to be in a slump.
  • In the meantime, the miserable gits who can't be bothered with the print version will have to do without.
  • Would they be bothered because the stadium is still under construction?
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