Search results
- Dictionaryhard/hɑːd/
adjective
- 1. solid, firm, and rigid; not easily broken, bent, or pierced: "the slate broke on the hard floor" Similar Opposite
- 2. done with a great deal of force or strength: "a hard whack" Similar Opposite
adverb
- 1. with a great deal of effort: "they work hard at school" Similar Opposite
- 2. so as to be solid or firm: "the mortar has set hard"
noun
- 1. a road leading down across a foreshore. British
Powered by Oxford Dictionaries
HARD definition: 1. not easy to bend, cut, or break: 2. difficult to understand, do, experience, or deal with: 3….
HARD meaning: 1. firm and stiff, and not easy to press or bend: 2. difficult to do or understand: 3. using or….
HARD meaning: 1. not easy to bend, cut, or break: 2. difficult to understand, do, experience, or deal with: 3….
HARD WORK - Synonyms, related words and examples | Cambridge English Thesaurus
HARD-WORKING definition: 1. always doing a lot of work: 2. always doing a lot of work: 3. always putting a lot of effort….
HARD BY definition: 1. very near: 2. very near: . Learn more.
HARD-PRESSED definition: 1. having a lot of difficulties doing something, especially because there is not enough time or….
HARD UP definition: 1. having very little money: 2. having very little money: 3. having very little money
HARD LINE definition: 1. the fact of being very severe, for example in refusing to allow something or to give people what….
HARD-CORE definition: 1. unlikely to change, or difficult to change: 2. the people who are the most interested and….