ganda Bebe
No, they are just synonyms. The comparative of difficultis more difficult (the superlative is the most difficult). The comparative of hard is harder (the superlative is the hardest).
You can use any of S.M.A.R.T. status monitoring tools, for example Active SMART http://www.ariolic.com/activesmart/ or DriveHealth or HDDLife. All of them retrive the SMART status of the hard drive, analyse it or show it to the user, so one can check if the hard drive about to fail or it is completely OK. Anyway, it's useful to know what the hard drive can say itself about its status.
usually smart work is boooooring, but hard work is exhausting. I like better hard work.
The correct form is "harder." When comparing two things, the comparative form of "hard" is "harder." Adding "more" before "hard" would be redundant and incorrect. So, it is grammatically accurate to say "harder" when comparing the difficulty of two things.
* Working smart is working with a goal in mind, a goal that is meaningful to you. Working smart also means knowing what points are high priority and what you can be flexible on, so you can focus on what's important. Working smart also means...being creative and looking for other ways to get work done faster
The cacophony in the streets made it hard to sleep.
by: moha ali
We tried hard but there was nothing we could do.
study hard REALLY! JUST GET YOU BUTT UP STOP BEING LAZY AND STUPID, OR JUST GIVE UP ON LIFE!
born smart is were you are born smart is where its where you are smart since the day you were born but get smart is were you go to school and learn the hard way
Its and It's are hard to get straight! It's time to give the dog its supper. It's a hard thing to get that tiny nail into its hole.
please help my problem because its to hard to me send from shalimar