troublemaker|troublemakers in English
noun
one who causes trouble for others; one who causes difficulty; one who causes worry; one who causes conflict
Use "troublemaker|troublemakers" in a sentence
1. You are an accident prone troublemaker.
2. The principal promised to root out the troublemakers.
3. Such policies weaken the resolve of potential troublemakers.
4. He was employed to chuck out any troublemakers.
5. He seems to be stuck with the label of 'troublemaker'.
6. By his own admission, he was “a troublemaker from age 12.”
7. Democrats figure Newt feels safer if potential troublemakers are out of town.
8. Furthermore, the loud music often attracts troublemakers, strangers who simply come uninvited.
9. Biff is a rough-and-tumble troublemaker who becomes Joe’s closest friend
10. It's the dumb kid, the troublemaker, the one who never does his homework.
11. If we don't clamp down on these troublemakers now, the situation could get out of control.
12. Troublemaker (New Orleans Bourdons Book 2) - Kindle edition by Kamps, Lisa B.
13. Why did the court find Jesse Cantwell guilty of being a troublemaker?
14. Moreover, the murmurers did not act as troublemakers and raise their voices against Jehovah.
15. How did the courts establish that we are ministers, not troublemakers, seditionists, or peddlers?
16. 20 Now there was a troublemaker named Sheʹba+ the son of Bichʹri, a Benʹja·min·ite.
17. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading Troublemaker (New Orleans Bourdons Book 2).
18. WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS: “A troublemaker causes dissension, and a slanderer separates close friends.”
19. People back home call me a heckler, a troublemaker, an irritant, a rebel, an activist, the voice of the people.
20. The Bullies are malicious troublemakers who will attack Mono on sight and will even bully each other
21. 🔊 Because my son is a troublemaker, he likes to Agitate his younger sister by hiding her dolls
22. In the Sorry! Pets Behaving Badly game players move around the board as the furry or feathered troublemakers who have trashed the house.
23. I will take this opportunity to insist, for the record, that, in Castilian, 'hooligans' is an Anglicism for a type of specialised, usually British, troublemaker
24. When alone, many young people are not troublemakers, yet in a group or in pairs, they may try to get attention, doing foolish and nasty things.
25. Blusterer: 1 n a person who causes trouble by speaking indiscreetly Synonyms: loudmouth Type of: bad hat , mischief-maker , trouble maker , troublemaker , troubler someone who deliberately stirs up trouble