The last nuisance to bemoan is the speedometer, whose script was hard to read.
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He also told the hearing that residents were concerned that flies would become a bigger nuisance.
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An airfield in North Yorkshire has been fined for causing noise nuisance from motorsports.
The officers arrested Snooki, charging her with being drunk and disorderly while creating a public nuisance.
Some Canadians, it says, consider the penny more of a nuisance than a useful coin.
Nuisance or not, serving on a jury is, by law, a civic responsibility you must fulfill.
Perhaps because it is so common, chronic sinusitis is often dismissed as a nuisance, says Edelman.
The attorneys general are basing their case on nuisance doctrines established by common laws.
Cooking is hard work, peeling ten potatoes is a nuisance, peeling five hundred is a pain.
Residents are used to straying sheep but say the rogue cattle have become a nuisance.
Household insects are a destructive nuisance, and outdoor pests can become a public health issue.
"Nuisance" viruses can cost companies money, even though they do not destroy data or damage computers.
For other religions, especially smaller and foreign-sounding ones, official obstruction is an increasing nuisance.
Typically, a public nuisance is just that: polluted air or water, say, or traffic.
Merely showing that lots of individuals suffer private harm does not mean the nuisance is public.
My Oxford English Dictionary, however, does define nuisance as "an annoyance" or "an obnoxious practice".
For example, we do not mean nuisance as defined in the Environmental Protection Act 1990.
Figures from Tayside Police showed that in 2009 the force received 4, 742 hoax or nuisance calls.
Mr Oldfield, 36, of Myrdle Street, east London, denies the charge of causing a public nuisance.
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Wal-Mart used to take a hard line on what its executives viewed as nuisance lawsuits.
Bad grammar can seep into your everyday life and become more than a slight nuisance.
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As much as we all enjoy the sound of birds chirping, sometimes they can be a nuisance.
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Moreover, we are told, global warming is expanding ragweed range and the range of other nuisance plants.
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Now, Google text ads are almost ubiquitous and for some people, they have even become a nuisance.
Manno also said that he and Osmus considered Martin a nuisance who peppered them with unwanted e-mail.
According to perspective he was a damned nuisance, a peril to society, or a charming, modern-day libertine.
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Indeed, street-level harassment is like traffic for drivers, an unavoidable nuisance women confront whenever they leave the house.
For decades gas in remote locations was flared off as a nuisance by-product alongside more easily shipped oil.
How nice at the international airport to be spared the nuisance of those arrival and departure cards, and--wow!
But this is small comfort to ordinary Mozambicans for whom corruption is much more than just a nuisance.
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