You spelled it perfectly.
To cause trouble can be variously to incite, agitate, instigate, or provoke.A troublemaker can be an instigator, agitator, fomenter, rabble-rouser, or provocateur.
mayhem
You can make it all one sentence by adding a colon. "Amy was looking up words in the dictionary, but was having trouble: she didn't know how to spell them." As for Amy's problem, there is no sure fix. You can try words lists, or a thesaurus (looking at words that mean the same thing), or by typing them into a browser or word processing program that has a spell-checker that suggests words.
I don't know about word clues, but when I have trouble remembering how to spell a word, I make a saying out of the letters. For "wrist", I might tell myself "Writing Right Is Simple Type".
You spelled it right M-i-r-a-c-u-l-o-u-s yep I have trouble with that word too!
The Spanish word for 'trouble' is 'problema'.
Troble?... Troble?... Do you mean trouble?
Schlitzohr Which is like.. a sneaky person or a thief. Or.. a trouble maker of course.
The correct spelling is trouble (problem, difficulty).
Trouble in Hawaiian is spelled "pekole."
Trouble.
probably
They are in "trouble at hogwarts" When snape is "killed" by voldemort at one time the spell looks like a star. click on the star and you get there They are in "trouble at hogwarts" When snape is "killed" by voldemort at one time the spell looks like a star. click on the star and you get there
To cause trouble can be variously to incite, agitate, instigate, or provoke.A troublemaker can be an instigator, agitator, fomenter, rabble-rouser, or provocateur.
Phonetically, this could be the adjective terrible(awful).The spelling, however is close to the noun trouble(difficulty, problem).
The author of the witches spell poem is William Shakespeare. He wrote the poem as part of his play "Macbeth," where the three witches recite the spell "Double, double, toil and trouble."
mayhem