"the new neighbor is threatening to become a nuisance , dropping in on us several times a day",
"folding up this map correctly is such a nuisance",
"Recent Examples on the Web",
"Chicago has already seen temperatures in the 90s for much of June, and those face coverings can quickly become a frustrating nuisance in the heat. \u2014 Jared Wyllys, Forbes , 15 June 2021",
"Adams started breaking down how Wiggins could use his 7-foot wingspan, lateral agility and basketball smarts to become a nuisance to opponents. \u2014 Rusty Simmons, SFChronicle.com , 10 Jan. 2021",
"Poly has been committed to solving the nuisance that varying audio and video environments bring. \u2014 Patrick Moorhead, Forbes , 26 May 2022",
"The most pressing nuisance , by far, has been ticketing issues though. \u2014 Chris Gardner, The Hollywood Reporter , 23 May 2022",
"But the reality is that the much bigger nuisance is not the heat, but the cold. \u2014 Dalton Ross, EW.com , 5 May 2022",
"Chamber of Commerce attorney John Tucker said the massacre was horrible, but the nuisance is not ongoing. \u2014 NBC News , 3 May 2022",
"His son and others counseled him to treat the suit as a nuisance , settle with the plaintiffs and get on with his life. \u2014 Edward Kosner, WSJ , 5 May 2022",
"Civil rights attorney Damario Solomon-Simmons filed the lawsuit in 2020 under the state\u2019s public nuisance law. \u2014 Essence , 21 Oct. 2019"
],
"history_and_etymology":{
"Middle English nusaunce, noisaunce \"harm, damage, (in law) cause of annoyance or inconvenience,\" borrowed from Anglo-French nusance, noisance, from nuis-, nois-, nus-, stem of nuire, nure, noisir, nuser \"to injure, damage, vex\" (going back to Latin noc\u0113re \"to injure, harm\") + -ance -ance \u2014 more at noxious":""
},
"first_known_use":{
"15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1":""