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Difference between Be in trouble and Have trouble

be in trouble

1. be in a difficult or dangerous situation:

  • The Youth Board finds the youngsters who are in trouble and begins to work with them.

2. (euph., of an unmarried woman) be pregnant:

  • She said she consented to be married to the prisoner as she believed she was in trouble.

Note: The expression does not correlate in meaning with the phrase be troubled

1. be put to the inconvenience of doing smth.:

  • Mineralogists have often been troubled to distinguish with certainty between apatite and nephelin.

2. be anxious or concerned:

  • The King was troubled, lest this eloquent man should shake his resolution.

have trouble—experience serious problems:

  • The telegraph lines began to have trouble, and for a while the experts couldn’t figure out what was the matter.