It made it hard to plow with the horse. It wasn't until the coming of the tractor that the great plains were plowed deeply and much to the harm of the soil.
Native tribes of the plains used floodplain terraces for cropland. The tough prairie sod prevented cultivation of the uplands. They also used the trade system in which they would trade meats and hides such as buffalo for vegetables.
The farmers of the Great Plains, or sodbusters, built their homes out of the sod, or peices of the tough buffalo grass of the prairie.They laid chunks of sod into rows to build wallsThe houses were well insulated. They stayed cool in the summer and warm in the winter.But the roofs leaked rain and dirt. Mice, snakes and insects lived in the walls
There is no 'best' in wood . . . ash is tough, but maple is hard. They are both great for different things.
Rajasthan is one of the significant hot desserts in the world. It isn't easy to live there because of the heat. Gangetic plain is a 700km long fertile plain.
It makes Americans feel tough when they eat it. It is stimulant for muscle growth. Not to mention, it tastes GREAT!
tough,hard
so tough........
difficult, hard, laborious, tough
tough (meat) - fefeu; difficult - faigata; hard to break - ma'a'a
Not difficult.
yes it is, need proof look on this link... http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/difficult
tough of meat is fefeu; tough as in difficult is faigata; tough as in hard to break is ma'a'a. I would use any to translate tough boy - tama fefeu, tama faigata and tama ma'a'a.
The tough soil and very sticky sod of the Great Plains required an innovation in plow technology. The steel plow, of course, was well known, but John Deere developed one that was self scouring. This allowed more efficient plowing since the clay laden soil did not stick to the plow.
tough D is term meaning that you play great defense
Because it has extreme cold conditions and tough hilly terrain.
Synonyms may include: difficult, hard to do, arduous, laborious, tough, burdensome, exacting, rigorous.
Many of WIlla Cather's stories are based on the struggles of immigrants as they settled on the Nebraska plains, as well as her own early years in Nebraska.