troublemaking
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]troublemaking (comparative more troublemaking, superlative most troublemaking)
- Causing trouble.
- 2005 April 10, Christopher Hitchens, “André Malraux: One Man's Fate”, in New York Times Book Review:
- Moving to Saignon in the mid-1920s, he helped to produce a troublemaking newspaper, L'Indochine, which ventilated the many complaints of the Vietnamese about forced labor, land expropriation, and police brutality.
Translations
[edit]causing trouble
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Noun
[edit]troublemaking (usually uncountable, plural troublemakings)
- Causing trouble; acting in a disruptive way
- 1974 February 2, John Collis, Guy Hocquenghem, Joe Interrante, Mike Riegle, Charley Shively, Raphael Shively, Lionel Soukaz, “The Homosexual Century: In Search of Gay Memory”, in Gay Community News, volume 1, number 32, page 9:
- Finding the words, the expressions, the way of living that could be the trouble-making inside this closed society, that's our main goal. It's mine anyway. It's the only way to be open, to be conscious of not being just an object, of not being only acted upon, but doing things by yourself.
- 2007 July 26, Anna Jane Grossman, “Is Junie B. Jones Talking Trash?”, in New York Times[1]:
- The spunky kindergartener (first grader in more recent volumes) is prone to troublemaking, often calls people names and isn’t averse to talking back to her teachers.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]causing trouble; acting in a disruptive way
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