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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Verb

trouble, troubling, trublesome,trouble, from this which of the following is verb
  

Top answer

Troubling and trouble. Trouble is a noun depending on context and troublesome is an adjective.

  • Troubling and trouble.
  • Trouble is a noun depending on context and troublesome is an adjective.
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4 Answers
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Troubling and trouble. Trouble is a noun depending on context and troublesome is an adjective.
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"Trouble" is the base form of a verb, and "troubling" is the present participle.

I'm sorry to trouble you. (infinitive)

We often trouble the otherwise calm waters with the wake of our speedboat. (simple present)

The children were troubling the animals in the zoo. (past progressive)

Edit. Sorry, makka, I thought you had missed something, b
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It's no trouble Emotion: smile. In fairness I initally failed to say trouble was also a verb, but edited that shortly after.
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When you get to be a Mod, you have unlimited unrestricted editing! Emotion: happy

Umm, "troubling" can also be an adjective.

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