How To Use Troublemaker In A Sentence
-
Their proposal to the Jewish council of religious leaders also called the Sanhedrin that they cooperate in getting rid of this troublemaker was met with enthusiasm.
Puzzlements & Predicaments of the Bible
-
He said most of the trouble was down to a handful of hard-core troublemakers who were well known to police and the courts.
-
The troublemakers are being 'kettled' around Nelson's Column by a ring of several hundred officers.
-
He said a night-time curfew for known troublemakers might be the only way to make the area safe.
-
It insists it will help its 55 teachers to identify troublemakers - and will help pupils to make friends.
The Sun
-
Landlords share information about troublemakers and telephone each other to warn about rowdy drinkers.
-
It dismisses an entire culture in the eastern part of our nation as troublemakers and traitors.
-
She was not some Yankee, communist troublemaker with long hair and tattoos carpet-bagging her way through the State.
-
Mwapela would not comment directly on the Barotse Agreement except to describe the Barotseland Freedom Movement BFM, a youth-driven pro-secession grouping, as comprising a few troublemakers.
Western Zambian Province Said Calm after Secessionist Clashes
-
Teenage troublemakers who are causing upset in a corner of Morecambe are being warned against inflicting further misery on residents.
-
The principal promised to root out the troublemakers.
-
Instead police need to be able to apply corrective measures before troublemakers turn to crime.
Times, Sunday Times
-
And we are empowering the bullies, the delinquents and the troublemakers.
-
But also we can use nonlethal but tough methods to deal with any troublemakers.
Times, Sunday Times
-
Exactly a year earlier in the Tuskegee courthouse, his congressman, Tom Heflin, had attacked him as a liar and troublemaker, a fomenter of racial strife, a dangerous Negro.
Up From History: The Life of Booker T. Washington
-
But three in ten failed to complain as they didn't want to be known as a troublemaker.
The Sun
-
And, because cork is a democratic troublemaker, this can happen to the world's best wines as well as more humble ones.
Love at First Twist
-
The monthly event, stewarded by the cruisers themselves, aims at driving away the minority of troublemakers who race each other and perform dangerous, screeching wheelspins.
-
Whereas his fields used to sprout hemp dogbane and wirestem mully, now the troublemakers are mainly foxtail and pigweed, with buttonweed showing up some years, and some horseweed in the small grain.
-
Notwithstanding having the fact the military would have to deal with ever manner of acting up, acting out, outing and lawyering from the draftees, what value would these troublemakers be to the military.
Sound Politics: To Draft or Not to Draft
-
He is apparently viewed as a troublemaker and an intruder who should be ousted as soon as possible.
-
Residents living near an Accrington park that has been plagued by young troublemakers are being urged to reclaim it.
-
Such policies weaken the resolve of potential troublemakers.
-
Troublemakers: scapegrace ` wild and unprincipled, 'rakehell ` lewd and dissolute,' scarebabe (- bairn in Scotland), drawblood, flingbrand, blowcoal, makebate (as in ` debate '), stirpassion and stirstrife (why the wildflower loosestrife is accused of this propensity I know not), spitfire and shitefire
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol V No 1
-
Craig seems to have been determined to undermine the association's credibility and to brand its members as troublemakers.
-
The Elton Committee urged schools not to stereotype pupils from certain racial groups as troublemakers.
-
These new powers will give us the ability to intervene when there are signs of trouble and get rid of the troublemakers.
-
Typically, they go after someone who they can turn into what I call the "lone atheist troublemaker.
Chris Rodda: The Camp Pendleton Cross: The Facts vs. What the "Persecuted" Christians Are Saying
-
Japan's reactionary Tokugawa shogunate employed gunpowder to obliterate troublemakers and then banned all guns—even its own—for the sake of preserving the samurais' sword-wielding hegemony.
Where They Got Their Grit
-
The Clubwatch set-up will let door staff give their counterparts at other venues advance warning of potential troublemakers.
-
Troublemakers who create a nuisance at Lancaster bus station are to face stern new opposition.
-
You will also take a letter home to your parents that they will sign, or I'll make sure the school board has you pegged as a troublemaker for the rest of your high school career, am I understood?
-
Neither should travellers be automatically regarded as troublemakers, she contends.
-
Residents have also been urged to gather information on troublemakers in a bid to turn the estate's fortunes around.
-
She had never actually seen a widgie but she knew Stella's get up was exactly the kind of thing troublemakers wore.
-
There is growing concern among community leaders that drunks and vagrants are causing problems in public places, and volunteers are now carrying out sweeps of the shopping area to weed out troublemakers.
-
The two troublemakers were eventually asked to leave by the manager and commissionaire, but not before visiting the cloakroom and then creating as much disturbance as possible on the way out.
-
Such policies weaken the resolve of potential troublemakers.
-
They could support the police by being decent role models and keeping an eye on potential troublemakers.
The Sun
-
I love when bloggers censor and moderate comments - their blogs then go through a honey coated sunshiny period, blissfully free of what one commenter today is calling mockers and troublemakers.
When a wanker's snark would exceed her grasp.
-
The first lucky passenger was that same useless little troublemaker.
-
Two specialist teams armed with the latest surveillance technology will target troublemakers who plague estates throughout Bolton.
-
He is apparently viewed as a troublemaker and an intruder who should be ousted as soon as possible.
-
This little green-eyed troublemaker is sneaking up all over my relationship, through narrowed eyes, snippy retorts, and generally malicious thoughts.
-
We got rid of the troublemakers and we really started to do well.
-
There is no room for malcontents or troublemakers - an issue Button had to deal with or lose promising coach Greg Gilbert.
-
Joel eavesdropped on Dubiddy's conversation -- I had been marked out as a troublemaker.
NOTHING TO WEAR AND NOWHERE TO HIDE: A COLLECTION OF SHORT STORIES
-
They took action to discredit a potential troublemaker, for want of a better phrase.
The Sun
-
Officers want teachers to join them on night-time patrol so they can identify juvenile troublemakers and help bring them to book.
-
I do not deny she was disturbed, and her wish to end up on a secure wing was enough to raise awareness, but when she set fire to the female corridor she was seen as nothing but a troublemaker.
-
The authorities need to formulate and implement effective measures to keep these troublemakers off the streets.
-
Police are warning troublemakers that their behaviour will not be tolerated following another weekend of assaults and vandalism.
-
This time CCTV will be closely monitored around the ground and troublemakers will be instantly arrested.
-
the ejection of troublemakers by the police
-
They were marshalled into three groups - apparent ring leaders and troublemakers isolated into one group.
-
Thus pre-vindicated, any troublemaker can now articulate his freedom of umbrage, on the grounds that he was incited to violence by a poem, novel, painting, play, or critique.
-
Then she undermined him, destroyed his confidence in his own talent, put it about that he was unreliable, a troublemaker.
THE SOUND OF MURDER
-
No university wants to hire a coach with a history of lawsuits, a troublemaker, a rocker of boats.
-
He has a reputation as something of a troublemaker.
-
Police have drafted in translators fluent in Arabic languages to pinpoint potential troublemakers.
Times, Sunday Times
-
I hope the police can identify all the troublemakers and that they won't set foot in a football ground again.
The Sun
-
Residents have also been urged to gather information on troublemakers in a bid to turn the estate's fortunes around.
-
He would like to see the courts taking a tougher line with young troublemakers.
-
A second wall is being built around the old walled city, and a prison is being cleared out to house the troublemakers.
-
West Ham have vowed to issue lifetime bans to troublemakers.
The Sun
-
Authorities described the youths as troublemakers bored during a current school summer vacation.
-
Their triumph there merely confirmed their age-old reputation in Catholic eyes as subversives and troublemakers.
-
Police visit the troublemakers in their homes to tell them to stay away.
Times, Sunday Times
-
Police have been monitoring the site and using covert surveillance to trap the troublemakers.
-
And a final point, it is illegal to target redundancies on the basis of age, sex etc, and it is also thought a bit crass to try and get rid of troublemakers and stirrers.
-
The Austrian authorities soon marked him down as a troublemaker as he encouraged trade unions and attacked the Catholic Church.
-
Troublemakers have been congregating in Gilbert's Alley and causing problems at the town council meeting rooms.
-
The Murphy/"Koch" suggestion that troublemakers be placed in the crowd is the newsmaker here, but not necessarily the most interesting news.
Eric Alterman: Think Again: The Contours and Context of the Conservative Class War in Wisconsin
-
Association members will have access to an online database of known troublemakers.
The Sun
-
There are concerns about the allegiance of migrants waved into Britain from countries where they are known troublemakers.
The Sun
-
She had automatically labelled the boys as troublemakers.
-
Police visit the troublemakers in their homes to tell them to stay away.
Times, Sunday Times
-
After the headmistress branded him a troublemaker and excluded him from the Christmas party, he punctured her car tyres with a nail and was swiftly expelled.
-
The principal promised to root out the troublemakers.
-
Plainclothes and uniformed officers will be on patrol to prevent would-be troublemakers boarding flights.
-
Campaigners say they regret the violence, which was largely carried out by young troublemakers who had been drinking.
Times, Sunday Times
-
Uniform and plain clothes officers will attempt to snare troublemakers before warmer weather increases fire risks.
-
Before the match there was trouble in a little square outside the ground as riot police with batons waded in to quell troublemakers attached to both clubs.
-
Lately it has become a meeting point for young troublemakers.
-
They will continue to treat Hong Kong as a marketplace - and seek to marginalize dissenters as troublemakers.
-
Every society honors its live conformists and its dead troublemakers.
-
His irreverence for authority marks him out as a troublemaker.
-
The mother-in-law is an eavesdropper and troublemaker but has nothing to do with this story.
Peeling Onions
-
The Austrian authorities soon marked him down as a troublemaker as he encouraged trade unions and attacked the Catholic Church.
-
He seems to be stuck with the label of 'troublemaker'.
-
His reputation as a troublemaker told against him when he tried to change his job.
-
A gang of troublemakers which attaches itself to York City Football Club has re-emerged - and a member has posted a site dedicated to the group on to the Internet.
-
Japan's reactionary Tokugawa shogunate employed gunpowder to obliterate troublemakers and then banned all guns—even its own—for the sake of preserving the samurais' sword-wielding hegemony.
Where They Got Their Grit
-
He is also a chronic troublemaker and the father of a bunch of great kids.
-
It is better to stop troublemakers straightaway than to let their behaviour influence the rest of the crowd towards violence or vandalism.
Times, Sunday Times
-
Such policies weaken the resolve of potential troublemakers.
-
Instead, you have to deal with new cellmates, who are strangers at best and troublemakers sent to keep you company at worst.
-
Krusee is fiftyish, handsome, and blond, with the charm and slight impudence of someone who might have been a troublemaker as a child.
Interstate 69
-
But police say anti-social behaviour remains a problem and vowed to crackdown on troublemakers.
-
replacing troublemakers with more submissive people
-
Officers want teachers to join them on night-time patrol so they can identify juvenile troublemakers and help bring them to book.
-
Troublemakers were gobbing at the stage, the aggressive drunk was still circling unhindered in his own personal patch of clear dance floor.
-
Mr. Kulekhov, the journalist, calls its members troublemakers because many dub themselves "antifa" -- radical antifascists who have a history of clashing with racist skinheads at soccer matches.
A Killing in Siberia Injures
-
And they have applauded the role of the local community in helping the police to weed out the troublemakers.
-
I would hate you to think me a troublemaker.
-
I was worried that I would be regarded as a troublemaker if I complained about the safety standards in the factory.
-
Association members will have access to an online database of known troublemakers.
The Sun
-
He said a night-time curfew for known troublemakers might be the only way to make the area safe.
-
None other than those infamous troublemakers and malcontents, Winston Churchill and Thomas Jefferson, respectively.
-
Women who point out cases of harassment risk being labelled troublemakers.
-
Park users are calling for more resources for the parks constabulary and measures to lock out troublemakers at night.
-
It was natural for us to attempt to paint ourselves in a more favorable light while making out the others as the troublemakers and causers of ruin.
-
Despite the incident, residents said the travellers - who have lived on the site for the past seven years and have erected bungalow-type dwellings, fences and hardstanding - had not been troublemakers since they moved in.
-
Resistance to control makes Nicky a problem, a deviant, a troublemaker.
-
We had the knuckleheads, troublemakers, drinkers, the terminally unlucky and the hopeless dreamers.
-
The budget airline has banned 22 troublemakers for life this year so far.
The Sun
-
Association members will have access to an online database of known troublemakers.
The Sun
-
As far as the Empire was concerned, Gandhi was a troublemaker, an insurrectionist, and a traitor to the Empire.
-
They know the troublemakers who commit most of the crime.
The Sun
-
Plainclothes and uniformed officers will be on patrol to prevent would-be troublemakers boarding flights.
-
Craig seems to have been determined to undermine the association's credibility and to brand its members as troublemakers.
-
The media, police and state government are seeking to intimidate and demonise them, depict them as violent troublemakers and force them out of the city.
-
She says she was labelled as a ‘troublemaker’ in her small hometown.
-
For some time, licensees have used the early warning bleeper system to alert one another and the police of any troublemakers at large.
-
Police have been monitoring the site and using covert surveillance to trap the troublemakers.
-
The officers have radios and mobile phones and have authority to ask passengers to produce tickets and to ask troublemakers to get off.
-
The authority was continuing to crack down on troublemakers and was making streets cleaner.
-
How many would have considered the array of now vanished megafauna, including elephants and lions, that roamed North America before the troublemaker Homo sapiens arrived here just at the end of the Ice Age?
-
The reasons may be found in Rangoon, amid the mildewing British colonial buildings and billboards threatening to "" crush '' foreign troublemakers.
Burma's Men Of Gold
-
It's so true to the scene that it almost feels like a documentary and comes devoid of moralistic sideswipes: there are no evil dealers or manipulative promoters, no troublemakers showing up with guns or deaths from overdoses.
-
But local police officers say removing the benches would stop troublemakers from congregating there.
-
And 12 British officers will be sent to spot known troublemakers.
The Sun
-
No university wants to hire a coach with a history of lawsuits, a troublemaker, a rocker of boats.
-
Let's pitch out the troublemakers.
-
I wanna stand up for my rights, attend marches, and create bills of rights without being seen as a troublemaker.
-
Until recently, Americans felt that it was un-American to complain and management exploited this lingering bit of puritan sentiment by labeling dissatisfied customers and clients “troublemakers.”
Why Nothing Works
-
The film then turns its attention to the Willingham case: of a perpetual ne'er-do-well, the father of a 3-year-old daughter and infant twins who was known as a short-tempered troublemaker.
Marshall Fine: Movie Review: Incendiary: The Willingham Case
-
Uniform and plain clothes officers will attempt to snare troublemakers before warmer weather increases fire risks.
-
The police always say that they need to be able to identify troublemakers and having CCTV cameras would make this possible.
-
It was natural for us to attempt to paint ourselves in a more favorable light while making out the others as the troublemakers and causers of ruin.
-
He doesn't like troublemakers and has his own way of dishing out his own ferocious brand of punishment.
-
Association members will have access to an online database of known troublemakers.
The Sun
-
It is said that the remark about being a troublemaker was so highly prejudicial to the defendant that the trial should not have continued.
-
I'm not exactly a troublemaker but then I'm not a goody-goody type student either.
-
Behavioural support staff are helping to keep a watchful eye on troublemakers at a Swindon school.