inconveniences in English

noun
1
trouble or difficulty caused to one's personal requirements or comfort.
the inconvenience of having to change trains
verb
1
cause trouble or difficulty to.
noise and fumes from traffic would inconvenience residents

Use "inconveniences" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "inconveniences" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "inconveniences", or refer to the context using the word "inconveniences" in the English Dictionary.

1. A time for inconveniences, mishaps, yearnings.

2. 11 I can put up with minor inconveniences.

3. The profit will hardly Countervail the inconveniences

4. And they were tired of all the inconveniences of the Sioux.

5. Patience helps me to put up with the inconveniences and challenges of paralysis.

6. Illustrate the possible effects of our putting up with inconveniences without complaining.

7. 10 Due to technical problems, the KuKuChew blog aggregator is shut down. Sorry for any inconveniences.

8. Due to technical problems, the KuKuChew blog aggregator is shut down. Sorry for any inconveniences.

9. Are parents willing to tolerate the inconveniences of laundering their baby’s diapers or subscribing to a delivery service?

10. 17 In many lands our fellow witnesses of Jehovah must endure unusual inconveniences and tribulations, even brutal persecution, as they ‘walk by faith.’

11. I'd rather live in this old house with all its inconveniences than in one of those pokey bungalows where you haven't room to swing a cat.

12. According to the Economist magazine, it is estimated that besides the inconveniences caused, tardiness costs Ecuador $742 million a year —4.3 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product.

13. I'd rather live in this old house with all its inconveniences than in one of those poky bungalows where you haven't room to swing a cat.

14. Asudden distraint upon the whole property of a debtor for a debt of BGN 50, whereby oneas existence is blocked and huge inconveniences and financial burden are generated,a she explained.The top 5 of violated rights include complaints against monopolies and …

15. 1594, Richard Hooker, Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity: …Alteration, though it be from worse to better, hath in it inconveniences…· The state of being altered; a change made in the form or nature of a thing; changed condition

16. An Argument to Prove that the Abolishing of Christianity in England May, as Things Now Stand Today, be Attended with Some Inconveniences, and Perhaps not Produce Those Many Good Effects Proposed Thereby, commonly referred to as An Argument Against Abolishing Christianity, is a satirical essay by Jonathan Swift defending Christianity, and in particular, Anglicanism, against contemporary