- disturb
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dis·turb vt1: to destroy the tranquillity or composure of2: to throw into disordervi: to cause disturbancedisturb the peace: to cause a disturbance
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam-Webster. 1996.
- disturb
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I
verb
agitate, alarm, annoy, arouse, badger, bedevil, befuddle, bewilder, bother, churn, commovere, confound, confuse, conturbare, derange, disarrange, discomfit, discompose, disconcert, dishevel, dislocate, dislodge, dismay, disorder, disorganize, disorientate, displace, displant, displease, disquiet, distemper, distract, distress, enrage, exasperate, ferment, fluster, havoc, incommode, interfere, interrupt, intrude, irk, make uneasy, meddle, molest, nettle, nonplus, outrage, overturn, perplex, perturb, perturbare, pique, plague, puzzle, rearrange, roil, rouse, ruffle, shake, shake up, startle, stir up, subvert, tamper, trouble, unbalance, unnerve, unseat, unsettle, upset, vex, worry
associated concepts: disturbing the peace, right to quiet enjoyment
II
index
affront, aggravate (annoy), agitate (perturb), annoy, badger, bait (harass), confuse (create disorder), discommode, discompose, disconcert, discontinue (break continuity), dislocate, dislodge, disorganize, disorient, displace (remove), disrupt, distress, embarrass, evict, harass, harrow, harry (harass), hector, impair, inconvenience, interfere, interrupt, irritate, menace, mistreat, molest (annoy), muddle, obfuscate, offend (insult), perplex, persecute, perturb, pique, plague, remove (eliminate), upset
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
- disturb
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v.To interfere with peaceful, normal conditions; to throw into disorder; to intrude or interrupt.
The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell. 2008.