No. Tuff is its own word, referring to a kind of rock fromed from volcanic ash.
"Tough" and "tuff" are both words, with "tough" being used to describe something strong or difficult, and "tuff" referring to a type of rock formed from volcanic ash.
The homonym for tough is 'tuff,' which refers to a type of volcanic rock made of compacted volcanic ash.
The vowel sound in "tough" is /ʌ/ as in the word "cup."
Canvas. A piece of coarse material used for sails, tough clothing, or painting medium.
tough in Tagalog: matigas; astig
No, "stir tough" is not an adverb. It appears to be a misspelling or a phrase that doesn't make sense. "Stir" can be a verb meaning to mix or move something with a spoon or other tool, and "tough" is an adjective meaning strong or resilient.
The correct spelling of the adjective is tough. The spelling tuff refers to rock made of compressed volcanic ash.
Tough is the same as rough; tuff means cool (ex:a tuff looking Mustang or a tuff record)
tough
The homonym for tough is 'tuff,' which refers to a type of volcanic rock made of compacted volcanic ash.
The spelling tuff is a type of volcanic ash rock.It is also used in trade names for the adjective tough(strong, durable).The similar word is tuft (a clump of fibers or hairs).
tough and tuff are two different words. Tough is the same as rough; tuff means cool, sharp- like a tuff-looking Mustang or a tuff record.
tough meas like strong and tuff means cool or slick
we can use tough instead of hard.
No. Tough can mean hard, but it can also mean strong. Tuff is a kind of volcanic rock.
Words that rhyme with the slang tuff would include:Bluffbuffcuffduffenoughfluffgruffhuffmuffpuffroughruff (dog bark)scuffscruffsnuffstufftoughMy teacher marked "tuff" wrong because the word is spelled "tough".
No, through sounds like thru, and tough sounds like tuff.
tough