Example sentences of "of the trouble " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Part of the trouble with Harwich is it 's neither one thing nor the other . ’
2 After the hearing in the court Alison Draper , who lives near the station , said : ‘ Nearly all the people here are against the festival because of the trouble we had to put up with last year .
3 The FA made Birmingham 's away matches all-ticket after trouble at Crystal Palace last season and Chief Supt Kenneth McKay , head of Blackpool police , said fans without tickets caused most of the trouble .
4 Mr Roskha said of the trouble in Kishinyev : ‘ Several thousand people from the Popular Front and other groups broke through cordons of police and climbed on to the tanks and armoured personnel carriers , waving banners and chanting slogans .
5 In strategic terms the England manager , who does not have a Gerson or Pele to bail his team out of the trouble caused by such indiscretions , was right , but if you drive the idiosyncrasies out of football altogether what is left can be grey indeed , which is what one finds a little disconcerting about the present Brazilian side .
6 Part of the trouble stemmed from a dislike of Sandys ' refusal to heed professional advice , and from his propensity for allowing the senior civil servants in the Ministry of Defence to usurp the powers that properly belonged to the Chiefs of Staff .
7 The continuing bail-out of the FSLC , the FDIC 's counterpart for the savings-and-loan industry , shows the scale of the trouble .
8 For instance , part of the trouble in the clean-air example is that nobody owns the air ; if somebody did , polluters would not be able to dirty it with impunity .
9 Shrewdly , in view of the trouble such ambitions were to cause her successors , the queen turned Bradley down .
10 The drink had something to do with it , no doubt , but lack of a decent woman in his house was the real cause of the trouble .
11 Now you regret it and not because of the trouble I 'll get into but the trouble you 'll get into . ’
12 Disagreement about the rate at which parents let go is usually the root of the trouble .
13 Parents may jump to the conclusion that the fact of being adopted is the root of the trouble when that has nothing to do with the case .
14 If you begin to feel better , then it is likely that hyperventilation is the cause of the trouble .
15 If you have cut out more than two or three foods , and your baby gets better , then you will probably wish to test the foods to see which ones were the cause of the trouble — often it will just be one food .
16 If the child gets better when certain foods are excluded , then they should be reintroduced to check that they were the source of the trouble .
17 The real cause of the trouble is , that parents and teachers always pass on to us , as children , what they themselves have been told , and this has been going on for hundreds , or even thousands of years .
18 Wright 's case is typical of the trouble life insurance companies have encountered with two of their most important distribution channels , the tied agent ( a firm of sales people ) and the appointed representative ( an individual self-employed sales person ) .
19 Nicholas Winton identified the state travel agency as the source of the trouble .
20 You can only carry out remedial action one step at a time , so you must start by removing the primary cause of the trouble , and that is the polluted water .
21 Fortunately you have a chancre which has appeared soon , and this means that the system has an opportunity to right itself as far as it can , having got rid of some of the trouble .
22 That decision was the second major controversy of Hunt 's extraordinary year : this time not just Ferrari but many others felt that the race had been stopped to give Hunt time to repair his car , an argument given plausibility by the fact that Lauda had made his way out of the trouble and was clearly leading the race when it stopped .
23 Mario and I agreed during that long flight that part of the trouble had to be media coverage .
24 That was part of the trouble , that was how it was that events were set in motion .
25 I was afraid to go back home for fear of the trouble I 'd be in from Mum .
26 The uprising was put down by the action of the police and the army , and an unknown number of people were killed , among them Muhammadu Marwa Maitatsine , leader of the fanatical sect which was at the centre of the trouble .
27 By some kind of irony this was exactly the reverse of the trouble with masonry cathedrals which fell down because they turned out to be in tension when the builders held that they were in compression .
28 Wood is not a material which suffers fools gladly and a great deal of the trouble with wooden aeroplanes was due to wooden people .
29 As play was held up Bucknor strolled over to the scene of the trouble and appealed for calm .
30 Just think of the trouble the police had gone to in catching this young person .
  Next page