Polish English Dictionary

język polski - English

kłopotać kogoś in English:

1. to bother sb



English word "kłopotać kogoś"(to bother sb) occurs in sets:

Breaking the Barriers

2. bother someone



English word "kłopotać kogoś"(bother someone) occurs in sets:

Breaking the Barriers

3. to inconvenience sb


to inconvenience sb

English word "kłopotać kogoś"(to inconvenience sb) occurs in sets:

The Office season 1 - Vocab

4. to burden


to burden
I don’t want to burden my mother with my problems

5. bother


Don't bother.
Don't bother waking me up at 4:00 a.m. I don't plan to go fishing tomorrow.
The politician did not bother to apologize for betraying our trust.
When I was a kid, touching bugs didn't bother me a bit. Now I can hardly stand looking at pictures of them.
I will play Sudoku then instead of continuing to bother you.
Children often bother their parents.
In the end, it was just too much bother so I went home by taxi.
The very pure spirit does not bother about the regard of others or human respect, but communes inwardly with God, alone and in solitude as to all forms, and with delightful tranquility, for the knowledge of God is received in divine silence.
It's only when I can't sleep at night that the ticking of the clock becomes loud enough to bother me.
I'm going to see your father today, about career counselling. "You don't need to bother with that."
I know no freer country than my own, for never do I bother leaving home.
It was to say that going to the station was too much of a bother after all so I should come to the hotel she's staying at. Good grief, what a selfish woman!
Are you still letting last night's fight bother you? That's so naive.
Money is a big bother: you can live neither with it nor without it.
It must bother you to have taken a bad master. "I'm stupid too. So, it's all right."

6. perplex


They were perplexed by her response.
I must acknowledge that, although it is not typical of the Presidency to say so, I am closing it with a degree of perplexity.
To perplex is defined as to confuse or complicate.
An example of perplex is to challenge a class with a very difficult question.
I was perplexed as to my own best course of action.