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43 Sentences With "went to the trouble"

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

What is nice is that Facebook went to the trouble of properly spinning out Medium.
And I felt if I ever went to the trouble to birth a kid, I'd keep it.
The couple even went to the trouble of building a bridge to link the villa to the rooftop.
They'll probably love just spending time with you, and knowing you went to the trouble to orchestrate this.
So why a South London hospital went to the trouble of warning Crystal Palace fans not to overdo it is well beyond me.
On the grounds of a medieval estate in the center of town, near the cathedral, someone went to the trouble to dig a pit for the dead.
In mid-April, with less than two months to shutdown, MoMA went to the trouble of installing Jennifer Bartlett's 1975-76 magnum opus, "Rhapsody," in the atrium.
"The fact that they went to the trouble of getting the rules and running the game—it's a bizarre and ironic form of validation, I suppose," Horvath said.
I can't believe that he went to the trouble to do that, and I knew at the time that this was not a material he was familiar with.
The only way voters knew if they were voting for a delegate who supported their favored presidential candidate was if they went to the trouble of educating themselves.
"There's a 20-minute supercut video on YouTube where somebody went to the trouble of figuring out all of the fatalities and then edited them all together," Amrich says.
Like other hard-to-find cult features — especially horror movies — the original Wicker Man had its greatest impact on serious cinephiles who went to the trouble of tracking it down.
At the time the $200 threshold was set, the Internet did not exist, and generally only journalists or political consultants went to the trouble of looking at lists of contributors.
Instead, the agency apparently went to the trouble of acquiring a Hong Kong-based SIM card in order to hop over the Great Firewall and send this ultimately ill-fated missive.
Complicating matters, Roman may not have had access to a landline, which may explain why he went to the trouble of having to unlock his mother's iPhone with her limp, unconscious finger.
But in case you needed someone to fact-check this one for you, the New York Times went to the trouble in an article from 2014:Since 1990, 449 ["celebrities"] have died.
Mr. Netanyahu, who himself has demonized Mr. Soros as an enemy of Israel, went to the trouble of retracting a statement by Israel's ambassador complaining about Mr. Orban's vilification of Mr. Soros.
In 1926, Porter shows, she went to the trouble of inventing an interview with herself—a scene of a journalist badgering the author as she waits for a train in Grand Central Terminal.
We shouldn't be surprised that Nike is developing another pair of these adaptive sneakers, especially after it went to the trouble of including a telling "1.0" in the name of its first generation HyperAdapt shoes.
Furthermore, Dittersdorf went to the trouble of writing a German-language satirical opera entitled "The Marriage of Figaro," in which the character of Cherubino becomes a caricature of Mozart: immature, flighty, vain, addicted to dancing.
One example of this comes from a conservative blog, Republican Michigander, which went to the trouble of actually checking the bottoms of old Gateway accessories to confirm that they weren't actually made in the United States.
And Thü Hürlimann even went to the trouble of building a Hackintosh that runs the 12-year-old Mac OS X variant Snow Leopard, just so he could always run the last version of FreeHand on modern hardware.
This time, the company went to the trouble of publishing numerous blog posts on its own pages as well as giving embargoed news and interviews to some news outlets with a clear indication that traffic is about to decline.
In 2010, to convict a man named Wayne Martin of killing two people during a stickup of a Brooklyn tire repair shop, someone in law enforcement went to the trouble of blanking out a paragraph in a homicide report.
In part, the curators and conservators say they went to the trouble of acquiring, conserving and displaying the fatberg in the hope that a face-to-face confrontation with their creation will provoke the shock needed to change Londoners' habits.
I hope you will publish this as I went to the trouble of searching Google for the correct spelling of chaperone, and then I went to the drink cup I bought at the theater for the correct spelling of Farinelli.
Photo: Shane Battye (Twitter)Not only did Battye manage to get his hands on one of the elusive Ultra 64 prototype controllers, but he also went to the trouble of tearing it apart to see how it differs from the final production version.
Rather than commenting on what a precious "lad-and-dad" photo it is, fans are up in arms about whether or not Tomlinson had certain ink removed, went to the trouble to airbrush a few out, or is just hiding them under a baby blanket.
A newly released report from the nonprofit Level Playing Field found that only 6900 Wells Fargo customers went to the trouble of filing arbitration claims against the bank in the past eight years, despite the more than two million instances of fraud unearthed by the CFPB.
The Miniatures collection in particular is the easiest grab bag of Halloween candy, the one you can upend into a bowl and make it look like you went to the trouble of finding tiny Krackels, Mr. Goodbars, and Hershey bars (in both the milk and "special dark" varieties).
Samsung went to the trouble of adding a dedicated Bixby button to the S8 phones, and how it is embraced by makers of other apps and owners of other services will be the key if it is to graduate from voice assistant to intelligent assistant as rival services are doing.
Zwonarz even went to the trouble of installing an electricity wire, connected to the main city circuit (so it would not show any extra kilowatts on his meter), to run some cooking appliances and a light-bulb in the pit. Noticing all his additional comings and goings, as well as missing food and cotton, Zwonarz's wife, Franciszka Zwonarz (née Jodłowska), concluded he was having an affair.
DWM launched the Sixth Doctor's comic strip adventures with the Doctor travelling on his own. His first story introduced a new companion, Frobisher — the shape-changing Whifferdill who often assumed the form of a penguin. Image rights were later obtained for Nicola Bryant, which allowed Peri to become the first humanoid televised companion regularly used in the pages of DWM. The writers even went to the trouble of trying to explain her earlier absence.
This may have been a means of demonstrating his power. People went to the trouble of finding out where Paul or his family were likely to be travelling and then avoided these streets where possible in order to avoid public prostrationl all of which was enshrined in law. On one occasion Paul reprimanded a nanny out pushing a baby's pushchair for not doffing the baby's sunbonnet at the Emperor: Paul removed it himself. "Wallowing in the pomp and circumstance of power", argue MacKenzie and Curran, Paul demanded his nobility prostrate themselves before him.
He is the principal personal assistant to Hyobu but is far more serious than the Major. He is often at odds with the Major because his pragmatic nature conflicts with Hyobu's lackadaisical personality often causing his efforts to be overlooked. For instance, when Magi went to the trouble of rigging B.A.B.E.L.'s precognition systems to recruit a new member, Hyobu repeatedly ignored his attempts to report it in preference to playing Tetris with Momotaro. Along with Momiji and Yo, the three were raised as children by Hyobu, something Magi finds embarrassing to reflect upon.
He had to fight to have his paintings allowed into the US as "fine art" rather than as a "craft" which had a much higher rate of import duty. Of his eight most popular subjects, seven were copied from photographs by other men. This caused many plagiarism disputes but at that time copyright had to be registered to be protected, and few photographers went to the trouble and expense of submitting their work to the copyright office. One of those subjects was a famous painting Head of Christ by Warner Sallman.
Freeman paid a great deal of attention to details, and carried out the experiments described in his books to ensure that they worked and would give the expected results. He also went to the trouble of visiting the places he wrote about so that the details in his descriptions were correct. De Balcam says that Freeman displays a mastery of craftsmanship in every story, and that he always used the language of the trade concerned. Freeman is a man who writes of things that he has seen, handled and understood, and not of things that he has met only in print, or in a hazy, inattentive observation.
Monteverdi went to the trouble and expense of preparing a new manuscript with revisions; had he had more time, he informed Striggio, he would have revised the work more thoroughly. Hearing nothing further from the Mantuan court, Monteverdi wrote to Striggio on 18 April 1620, offering to help with the staging. A month or so later, however, he learned that the duchess's celebrations had been scaled back, and that there had been no performance of L'Arianna. There is some evidence to suggest a possible performance in Dubrovnik, in or some time after 1620; a Croatian translation of the libretto was published in Ancona in 1633.
Madder still, though, is the set designer who went to the trouble of creating the revolving stage complete with dry ice - and in the first edition, a model of a 100m running track to illustrate how lazy people would line up in running shoes 98.2 metres high and forward-flop over the finish line. Give me Sunday night telly over Friday post-pub bilge like this." Caitlin Moran from The Times was one of the most damning. She described the show as: "like a light entertainment Wounded Knee, but with a studio audience", and she also compared it negatively to another comedy that had begun earlier in the week, Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle, saying: "The BBC amazes me.
Despite her progress, her school swimming coach did not regard her as suitable for the Nundah Primary School team, and went to the trouble of filming her breaststroke technique to show the other children what not to do. Neall's father cited his daughter's personal trait of wanting to prove her sceptics wrong as a major attribute in her future success. He took her to Arthur Cusack at Brisbane's Centenary Pool, and only two weeks later, she came third in the under-9 division of the 50-metre freestyle at the State Schools Championships. Soon after, the family moved back to Sydney, and Gail began to swim under Harold Reid at the Frank O'Neill pool at Pymble, New South Wales.
Economic historians Dan Bogart, Mauricio Drelichman, Oscar Gelderblom, and Jean-Laurent Rosenthal described codified law as the French Revolution's "most significant export." They wrote, "While restoration returned most of their power to the absolute monarchs who had been deposed by Napoleon, only the most recalcitrant ones, such as Ferdinand VII of Spain, went to the trouble of completely reversing the legal innovations brought on by the French." They also note that the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars caused England, Spain, Prussia and the Dutch Republic to centralize their fiscal systems to an unprecedented extent in order to finance the military campaigns of the Napoleonic Wars. According to Daron Acemoglu, Davide Cantoni, Simon Johnson, and James A. Robinson the French Revolution had long-term effects in Europe.
His rehabilitation within the CPGB may have been partly because there was "more than a sense of a honey trap in the case"—but also, suggests Graham Stevenson, because Glading had, after all, "been Harry's best man at his wedding". Indeed, it is quite probable that West does not know what he was talking about; as Pollitt—who was writing his autobiography whilst Glading was still imprisoned— went to the trouble of acknowledging Glading as his friend. This was in spite of the fact that Pollitt was well-known to be "extremely suspicious" of spies or anything that could incriminate him in their work. Glading's obituary, written by Rajani Dutt, omits all mention of his spying activities, merely stating that on his return from Russia, Glading "was engaged until his trial in trade union activities".
On January 1, 1970, the Falcon name was transferred to a low-priced version of the contemporary Ford Fairlane. The new model, which was a subseries of the Fairlane series,John Gunnell, Standard Catalog of American Cars 1946–1975, Revised 4th Edition, page 433 was marketed as the "Falcon 1970½" and was available as a two-door sedan, four-door sedan, and four-door wagon. Despite the fact that the Maverick two-door sedan had been released in April 1969 as a replacement for the soon to be discontinued "compact" Falcon two-door, Ford went to the trouble of tooling up a unique two-door sedan for the short 1970½ model run. While the number of luxury and convenience options available was limited, the car was available with the full range of Fairlane/Torino power-trains, ranging from the standard 250 cubic-inch six- cylinder and 302 cubic-inch V8 all the way to the 429 Cobra Jet V8.

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