Example sentences of "to the trouble of [v-ing] a " in BNC.

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1 From this point onwards it was entirely unnecessary for a testator to go to the trouble of writing a general damnatio in his will .
2 But why should any western power go to the trouble of administering a third world country when these can simply be milked dry ?
3 Why you would n't break a window to break a window , why you 'd go to the trouble of using a glass cutter
4 I once went to the trouble of having a pair made in the finest white doeskin but fortunately I have now outgrown such extravagances in much the same way that I have outgrown the petty conversations and banal posturings of those who frequent literary gatherings or , worse , television studio canteens .
5 I 'd even gone to the trouble of finding a real piece of rattan jog — the dried bark which gives a deep red colour to the dish — in the fifth Punjabi deli I 'd tried .
6 You might then find that having gone to the trouble of preparing a good speech and a joke just in case , you decide that you might as well give the speech anyway !
7 It may be asked why it was necessary to go to the trouble of carving a model which by all accounts may only have been used once , when the same procedure , in fine day would produce a mould directly .
8 Why does an exchange go to the trouble of becoming an RIE , rather than lobbying to become an ISSRO , or simply joining the Securities and Futures Authority ( SFA ) or the SIB ?
9 ‘ But if you go to the trouble of putting a screen round the tub , what else do you do ? ’
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