Behind her, a woman grabs another troublemaker by the ear and clouts him over the head, to the delight of the bystanders. |
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I wanna stand up for my rights, attend marches, and create bills of rights without being seen as a troublemaker. |
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She was not some Yankee, communist troublemaker with long hair and tattoos carpet-bagging her way through the State. |
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He is apparently viewed as a troublemaker and an intruder who should be ousted as soon as possible. |
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Like every prisoner in that 18th-century castle in Saxony, Crawford was a one-man awkward squad, a habitual escaper and troublemaker. |
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It is said that the remark about being a troublemaker was so highly prejudicial to the defendant that the trial should not have continued. |
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He thus adduced from the landlord evidence that she was a well-known troublemaker in local public houses. |
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I'm not exactly a troublemaker but then I'm not a goody-goody type student either. |
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It's not cool to strike a rebel pose these days, or socially correct to be a troublemaker anymore. |
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As far as the Empire was concerned, Gandhi was a troublemaker, an insurrectionist, and a traitor to the Empire. |
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Anyone who falls short of this absolute conciliatory posture is regarded not so much a peacemaker as a troublemaker. |
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But in London, they will not have to go so far: the Interior Minister has spared them the effort by censuring the troublemaker. |
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The latter were constantly considered as being the troublemaker of sovereignty and therefore of democracy. |
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And if they think you're a troublemaker, the black line goes through your name, and you don't get a contract. |
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It seems that Zeus was throwing a party and did not want to invite Eris because of her reputation as a troublemaker. |
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She was a troublemaker, exuberant, committed and whose indignation flowed through her veins, the potential of rebellion, the power of the word. |
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After a year of troublemaking, Sean is determined to behave himself, even if it means avoiding his friend and fellow troublemaker Scott. |
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From our vantage point, it's easy to forget that in her time Parks was seen as a controversial troublemaker. |
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After the headmistress branded him a troublemaker and excluded him from the Christmas party, he punctured her car tyres with a nail and was swiftly expelled. |
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Pretend you've never had any conflicts, just in case they label you a troublemaker. |
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Since the early 1990s, Cattelan has been described as a jokester, a sensationalist, a troublemaker. |
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Thus pre-vindicated, any troublemaker can now articulate his freedom of umbrage, on the grounds that he was incited to violence by a poem, novel, painting, play, or critique. |
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Given her testy relations with management, it would be easy to label Simpson a troublemaker. |
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The Nasty Gal queen went from troublemaker to CEO of a million-dollar company in just a few years. |
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Some troublemaker asked Kerry whether there was any way to avoid U.S. military action. |
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This little green-eyed troublemaker is sneaking up all over my relationship, through narrowed eyes, snippy retorts, and generally malicious thoughts. |
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One states one's grounds, and the judge considers whether one is being a nosy parker, a political troublemaker, or someone who has a legitimate interest and concern. |
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He is also a chronic troublemaker and the father of a bunch of great kids. |
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It is a troublemaker, something that prevents traditional forms of domination. |
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This matter needs to be examined in depth and we need to make this country understand that it cannot be the troublemaker of Europe before it has even joined Europe. |
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Someone who was too smart, who knew too much, might turn out to be a troublemaker, questioning orders and attempting to upset the established way of doing things. |
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As Ferrari Berlinettas last year or OSCAs two years ago, this year a famous troublemaker, maverick stylist and multi-brand mercenary will top the bill: Zagato. |
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Specifying a moral unsteadiness, he remarks that, by vocation, the anthropologist is a troublemaker at home, and a conservative in the culture and time of an elsewhere. |
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We desperately fought and died against systems in which the state listened to every telephone conversation and kept a list of everybody every troublemaker knew. |
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Upon arrival the troublemaker will be given to militia. |
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It can choose: it can either be a troublemaker or a constructive partner. |
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By either ignoring minorities or casting them in the role of villain, journalists unconsciously tell us stories about who is important, who is trustworthy, and who is a troublemaker. |
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Avi Mograbi is one of the enfants terribles of Israel's cinema, a troublemaker who is set, film after film, to build awareness for his people and to deconstruct Israel's myths. |
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I will take this opportunity to insist, for the record, that, in Castilian, hooligans' is an anglicism for a type of specialised, usually British, troublemaker. |
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If the teacher finds himself obsessively worried or disturbed by one student, he should suspect that the troublemaker is not really there to learn but to cause as much havoc as possible. |
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While the Australian black, brown, copperhead, the death adder, and taipan snakes are all poisonous, the real troublemaker is the tiger snake. |
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He dealt with the troublemaker in a Christianly manner, by offering him a second chance. |
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When Edwards Jackson III asked the park employees about the incident, he was told he was a troublemaker and a gang member, Lipton said. |
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There was a time, admits Rob Andrew, when he was branded a troublemaker. |
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