- tough
- 01. Hockey is a really [tough] sport, with players getting hurt quite often.02. This steak is really [tough]; I think I cooked it too long.03. It's pretty [tough] to find a job when you don't have any previous experience.04. Eric grew up in a [tough] neighborhood where a lot of the kids were stealing and doing drugs.05. Our math test was really [tough]; more than half the class failed it.06. Spencer is known as a [tough] negotiator, so I don't think you'll have much success getting him to back down.07. He had a [tough] time for a while there after his wife left him, but he seems to be doing better now.08. Only the [toughest] plants can survive in this desert climate.09. His army training has certainly [toughened] him up.10. These hiking boots are really [tough]. I've gone up a lot of mountains in them, and they're still in good shape.11. The government has introduced [tough] new laws to deal with illegal drugs.12. He has a reputation for [toughness] in his business dealings, but he is nonetheless very honest.13. The newspaper issued a [toughly] worded editorial against the war.14. I need to relax; I had a really [tough] day at work.15. Rosalyn Carter once said that you have to have confidence in your ability, and then be [tough] enough to follow through.16. Irving Berlin once suggested that the [toughest] thing about success is that you've got to keep on being a success.17. Robert Schuller once noted that again and again, the impossible problem is solved when we see that the problem is only a [tough] decision waiting to be made.18. Zig Ziglar once stated that when you are [tough] on yourself, life is going to be infinitely easier on you.
Grammatical examples in English. 2013.