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35 Sentences With "taken the trouble"

How to use taken the trouble in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "taken the trouble" and check conjugation/comparative form for "taken the trouble". Mastering all the usages of "taken the trouble" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Otherwise, why would he have taken the trouble to compose his diatribe?
Why should it offer more to children whose parents have not taken the trouble?
Although many on Iberville had seen his face, few had taken the trouble to learn his name.
Knopf has taken the trouble of having some of the other books retranslated into English for their rerelease.
It has found other banks, which have taken the trouble to understand its "painstaking" due diligence, says Mr Madden.
But I did want to convey a quick line of greetings and thanks for whatever you've taken the trouble of doing to acquire a copy of this issue.
But Woody's performance has also benefited from the sensitivity of the actor-animators who have taken the trouble to get to know him, and even care about him.
That's what two authors of inspired and inspiring books about aging discovered and, happily, have taken the trouble to share with those of us likely to join the ranks of the "oldest old" in the not-too-distant future.
The first is for the porch, the second is for the kitchen, the third is merely to confuse you and the fourth, which we have taken the trouble not to mark in any way, should NOT BE TOUCHED or something horrible will happen.
"If only he had taken the trouble to be a Frenchman we should be licking his boots in ecstasy," one British critic wrote of Ray — anticipating the director's fate as an artist more highly regarded abroad, and particularly in France, than he would be at home.
She wore a beautiful white dress she had bought the day before in the Rue des Fougères, having taken the trouble to go back to the hotel and change, despite the fact that her ex-partner had taunted her over the phone earlier that day when she'd spoken to him, saying that she cared only about her appearance and her ability to attract men.
No other author would have taken the trouble to excogitate him, and then treat him so badly.
How many Finnish civil servants have taken the trouble to learn Saami? I don’t think there are too many of them.” According to Rantala, society should use various perks to motivate civil servants to learn Saami.
One can understand this. It's galling, when you've > taken the trouble to learn that "an alibi" is not the same as "an excuse", > to find that the natives themselves seem to have forgotten the difference. Fritz Spiegl died suddenly during a Sunday lunch in Liverpool with his wife, Ingrid Frances Spiegl, and some friends.
A more nuanced assessment of Arcadius's reign was provided by Warren Treadgold: > By failing to reign, Arcadius had allowed a good deal of maladministration. > But by continuing to reign - so harmlessly that nobody had taken the trouble > to depose him - he had maintained legal continuity during a troubled > time.Treadgold, pg. 87 Arcadius had four children with Eudoxia: three daughters, Pulcheria, Arcadia and Marina, and one son, Theodosius, the future Emperor Theodosius II.
He bought a Looe lugger Truant and sailed with Isabel to Greece on an extended honeymoon. This journey was recorded in Isabel and the sea (1948). In Road to Resistance (1979) he records that while their boat was in Paris he received a summons from General Charles de Gaulle who had read Maquis and had taken the trouble on a trip in the area to detour to the village of Vieilley where Millar had been based.
In World Wars One and Two, soldiers from Pakistan fought side by side with French soldiers in France and other battlefields. Many of them paid the supreme sacrifice and are buried in France. I pray to Almighty God that relations between France and Pakistan, along with our friend USA grow stronger every day. I thank Their Excellencies, The Ambassadors of France and Pakistan, along with other friends who have taken the trouble to grace this occasion.
The resident population of the town under the Portuguese reached around 800 persons. Finding Portuguese holdings in Morocco expensive to maintain, King John III of Portugal decided to abandon it in 1533, although the final evacuation of Ksar es-Seghir would be delayed until 1549. It was recovered by Morocco thereafter, but the departing Portuguese had taken the trouble to evacuate the population, dismantle much of the fortifications and town, and dump debris and sand into the harbor, diminishing its immediate usefulness. In 1609, Ksar es-Seghir became a destination for Moriscos expelled from Spain.
Strong opinions were expressed by several persons who watched the affair from the steamers, and eventually the referee ordered Kelley to row over the course. The stakes were awarded to Kelley by the referee, but Sadler brought an action against the stakeholder, M. J. Smith, then proprietor of The Sportsman newspaper. The case became a cause célèbre. The Court decided that the referee had acted ultra vires in awarding the stakes to Kelley, inasmuch as he had not first taken the trouble to observe for himself Sadler's manoeuvres at the starting post.
Then > high pitch again; more rumblings. Change the tape speed: Same pattern. Now, > most people listening to this would call it stretches of high-frequency > noise interrupted by low patches. But if they had taken the trouble to study > the intervals, to analyze the relative proportions of high and low patches, > they would have found something else: a turbulent process that proceeds in > bursts and pauses, and whose parts scale fractally. The turbulent water > through which the submarine’s nose plowed in a one-dimensional line was not > one long alternation of fast and slow water.
King Charles had taken the trouble to make friends with the Annibaldi faction, led by Riccardo Annibaldi, who were enemies of the Orsini and who had been driven out of Rome in street fighting following the death of Nicholas III.Gregorovius, Volume V, part 2, pp. 491-492. They had taken refuge in Viterbo, and now, by coincidence, they were present and entrenched and ready to make trouble on behalf of Charles I and themselves. Annibaldi led a coup in Viterbo, which drove out the governor of the city, Orso Orsini, the dead pope's nephew.
An editorial in Asahi Shimbun said that the findings suggested "deeper problems" in the Japanese register system. "The families who are supposed to be closest to these elderly people don't know where they are and, in many cases, have not even taken the trouble to ask the police to search for them," read the editorial. "The situation shows the existence of lonely people who have no family to turn to and whose ties with those around them have been severed." One Japanese doctor, however, said he was not surprised at the news.
The media attention given to the "Call to Excellence" thrust Ripon onto the national stage. The Washington Star was one newspaper that editorially hailed the Society as "a new voice in the land ... a voice that ought to be heeded." Another voice was President (and Republican) Dwight Eisenhower, who wrote "my delight that an obviously intelligent group of people has taken the trouble to voice its consensus on this important subject, and also to express my basic agreement in the mainstream of its thinking.""Dwight D. Eisenhower to Walter N. Thayer".
He still gave the > real thing nakedly and directly, leaving nothing out. This must exemplify > what they call the 'expression of compassionate capacity,' for he rose to > the occasion out of the power of his realization. He said, 'The oral > instruction is like a candle: you can see while you hold it, and when you > give it away you have no more light. But since all of you have taken the > trouble to come here, expecting to hear me speak, I feel that I cannot > refuse giving you the pointing-out instruction.
This 13th-century manuscript - also known as Worcester F 160 - is often considered a unique and rare example of its genre. Holman, inspired by his profound affinity with the vocal tradition of the church, had taken the trouble of acquiring an intimate knowledge of Greek and Latin. Now he was determined to employ all his extraordinary knowledge and his insights in the tradition not only to do a scholarly study, but also a personal study. In 1961, Holman was awarded a PhD in paleography and musicology for his dissertation on the antiphoner entitled The Responsoria Prolixa of the Codex Worcester F 160.
Fritz Tobias (born October 3, 1912, in Charlottenburg, † January 1, 2011, in Hannover) was a German author, government official and member of the Social Democratic Party of Germany. He was most recently Ministerialrat in the Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior, where he belonged to the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution of Lower Saxony.Der Streitbare Reichstagsbrand- Forscher - Zum Tod von Fritz Tobias In the 1960s, he became known by his statements to the Reichstag fire. As "amateur historian" Fritz Tobias had taken the trouble to explore the history of the events in Berlin on February 27, 1933.
The Evening Standard thought that this meant the Act would be a dead letter, given experiences with the Factory Acts: > The Factory Acts are enforced by an elaborate machinery of inspection. > Anyone who has taken the trouble to inquire into the matter knows perfectly > well that without this stringent inspection they would be absolutely > worthless. Even as it is they are contravened openly every day, because the > best inspection must, from the nature of the case, be somewhat spasmodic and > uncertain. When an Inspector discovers that the law has been broken he > summons the offending party; but, as a rule, if he does not make the > discovery himself, no one informs him of it.
But we've taken the trouble to record in a church... When you set up mics, you capture more than just what is being recorded. You capture an ambience or a feeling as well. It's all about creating something unique and of the moment rather than just another bland factory preset." right In an interview with the Weedbus fanzine at the same time, Sutton commented: > "If you were making a film or something you want to have special effects — > for example, a train going over a cliff. Then you either get a little model > of it and simulate, or you can get a real train because that's probably > going to be more effective.
Of the three groups of settlers on the north side of the Peninsula, only the Deans brothers appear to have come to an arrangement with the local Māori before occupying the land, and even this agreement does not appear to have been put in writing before 1845. William Deans however, always prepared to be on good terms with the Māori, possibly because he had taken the trouble to learn their language. As finally drafted in 1846 his agreement gave him a lease for 21 years of a tract of land extending across the plain ‘six miles in every direction’ from the tributaries of the Avon River. The rental was eight pounds a year.
What gives this image a particularly timeless feel is the fact that the noble lady of the house — in accordance with the rules of etiquette and social decorum — has taken the trouble to get into her palanquin first before being carried out of the collapsing house.." The early Meiji period was marked by clashes between disputing samurai forces with differing views about ending Japan's self-imposed isolation and about the changing relationship between the Imperial court and the Tokugawa shogunate."Yōshū Chikanobu [obituary]," Miyako Shimbun, No. 8847 (October 2, 1912). p. 195; Gobrich, "Edo to Meiji," Japan Times. March 6, 2009; excerpt, "[Chikanobu] was originally a samurai vassal of the Tokugawa Shogunate who saw action in the Boshin War (1868-69), which ended the country's feudal system.
He subsequently attended the Northern State Normal School, and then the University of Michigan where he won honors for creative writing and graduated with a Master of Arts in English. After graduation, he taught high school English in Saline, Michigan, developing many techniques for dealing with his stuttering while teaching. Although he was regarded as a proficient and innovative teacher, the stress of his stuttering and his fear of speaking in many situations, made him unhappy at teaching. A severe stutterer, Charles attended two institutes for stutterers, the Bogue Institute of Stammerers in Indianapolis and the Millard School in Milwaukee, but these institutions did little good; at the time, "nobody had actually taken the trouble to learn about stuttering, so nobody knew how to cure it".
Then he assured the rights holder that he would protect them by representing them for free (the American studio would pay his fee when the film was made). Once Lee had secured the right to negotiate for an Asian company, he told the studios to regard the film as a script that someone had taken the trouble to film, and that had been tested and proved a hit in its home country. Lee earned his first motion picture producing credit on Gore Verbinski's 2002 blockbuster The Ring. He went on to produce the 2004 haunted house horror film The Grudge, which starred Sarah Michelle Gellar and was based on the 2002 Japanese film Ju-on: The Grudge, which was directed by Takashi Shimizu.
Sonneborn also showed the cytoplasmic inheritance of mitochondria and chloroplasts along with other internal cellular organelles (Kappa particles) which had their own DNA were inherited but limited by their distribution in the cytoplasm at the time of cell division. Only progeny from the 'half' of the cell with the mutant organelles inherited those organelles and thus the associated trait. Obviously, most cells had a distribution such that the organelles were in both halves but in cases where the new mutant arose and thus is rare then only those cell with cytoplasm containing the rare form inherited the traits associated with it. It is a mark of his excellence as a scientist that he should have taken the trouble to follow the fate of subsequent generations and so be able to make these observation.
Located in the centre, between the slope and the hedge, is an area of grassland on which several large, grey stones are scattered. In August 1889, two amateur archaeologists, George Payne and A. A. Arnold, came across the monument, which they noted was known among locals as the "Coldrum Stones" and "Druid Temple"; according to Payne, "the huge stones were so overgrown with brambles and brushwood that they could not be discerned". He returned the next year, noting that the brushwood had since been cut away to reveal the megaliths. In his 1893 book Collectanea Cantiana, Payne noted that although it had first been described in print in 1844, "since that time no one seems to have taken the trouble to properly record them or make a plan", an unusual claim given that a copy of Petrie's published plan existed in his library.
It would have been a struggle for anyone to subdue her in close quarters, and Mayer had told him at one point that the events may have lasted an hour and a half, a long time for burglars primarily after items of value in the home. Further, whoever shot his daughter had fired directly into her chest at close range and taken the trouble to muffle the shot with the quilt, suggesting that the killing was deliberate and not the accidental byproduct of a struggle. Mayer eventually retired, and the new detective assigned to the case told Nels that he was unable to follow up on Mayer's notes and did not think that any new leads would emerge. Nels was rebuffed again in 1993 when he offered to pay for DNA testing on the evidence from the murder, now that the technology was available; he was told that the police had to have a suspect in order to proceed with testing.

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