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trouble

difficulty / distress / to bother
Transitive VerbIntransitive Verb[C/U] Both

The word carries a heavy sense of frictioneither external (conflicts, obstacles) or internal (anxiety, guilt). It suggests an interruption of peace or order. As a noun, it often implies a state of being "in" something negative, suggesting a lack of control or a consequence for actions. Unlike "problem," which can be a neutral puzzle to solve, "trouble" usually feels more emotional or punitive. As a verb, the nuance shifts toward social friction and imposition. When used as an apology ("sorry to trouble you"), it serves as a polite social lubricant to acknowledge that the speaker is infringing on someone else's time or peace.

Uncountable when referring to a general state of distress or difficulty ('I'm in a lot of trouble'). Countable when referring to specific problems, complaints, or mechanical failures ('We are having some engine troubles').

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon in a corporate office; David is staring at a frozen laptop screen.
David Smith

Hey Brian, my laptop's acting up. I think it's in some kind of trouble.

David Smith
Brian
Brian

It's not 'in trouble', David. Did you even try to reboot it?

💡
David uses 'trouble' loosely to describe a technical malfunction, while Brian, the grumpy IT professional, corrects his imprecise language and suggests the most basic troubleshooting step (rebooting).

Meanings

Noundifficulty

Difficulty, problems, or distress.

"He got into a lot of trouble for skipping class."

Transitive Verbdistress

To cause distress or anxiety to someone; to inconvenience someone.

"I'm sorry to trouble you, but could you help me with this bag?"

Intransitive Verbto bother

To be worried or anxious about something.

"It troubles me that she hasn't called yet."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 11, 2026Report an Error