Here is an example of a non-quasiconvex subgroup of a hyperbolic group. (Quasiconvexity is an important property in the theory of hyperbolic groups, where quasiconvex subgroups are, for example, also hyperbolic.)
In $$G^*=\langle a, b, t\mid a^t=ab^3a, b^t=ba^3b\rangle,$$ the subgroup $H=\langle a, b\rangle$ is not quasiconvex.
This group is an HNN-extension of a free group, but where the base group "grows" under conjugation by $t$.
This is really a single example of a more general construction due to Ilya Kapovich, where the base group can be any non-elementary hyperbolic group $G$ and it embeds non-quasiconvexly into the HNN-extension $G^*$ [1].
A similar class of examples, with similarly "easy" presentations are the Hydra groups of Dison and Riley [2]:
In $$G_k = \langle a_1,\ldots , a_k, t \mid a_1^t=a_1, a_i^t = a_ia_{iā1} (\forall i > 1) \rangle,$$ the subgroup $H_k = \langle a_1t,\ldots , a_kt\rangle$ has Ackermannian distortion.
(The Ackermann function is a standard example of a recursive function which is not primitive recursive, so this is awesomely mind-bending distortion.) These Hydra groups are not hyperbolic, although Brady+Dison+Riley constructed hyperbolic analogues [3].
[1] see Theorem 4.1 of his paper "A non-quasiconvexity embedding theorem for hyperbolic groups", Math Proc. Cambridge Phil. Soc. 127 (1999), no. 3, pp. 461-486, (arXiv)
[2] W. Dison and T. Riley, "Hydra groups", Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici, 88 (3), (2013), 507-540, (arXiv)
[3] N. Brady, W. Dison, and T. Riley. "Hyperbolic hydra", Groups, Geometry, and Dynamics 7.4 (2013): 961-976. (arXiv)