Hard is an adverb in the sentence. The word hard does not require 'ly' to make it an adverb
A rope and pulley lessen the force needed to pull an item, but it increases the distance that you have to pull it. It also changes the direction that it moves: you pull the rope down, the item goes up.
When you pull up the flag you pull it up by the rope. The rope has a pulley on it. So the actual poll is not a pulley but it has a pulley system on it
nothing NEW... This could be true but it depends on how strong the people are pulling and how strong the rope is. If two people are pulling it equally hard enough then it will probably snap at its weakest point.
Pulling is when you pull something the action of pulling is when you have a tug of war you pull the rope
Has a wheel and a rope around it to pull
Finally is the adverb in that sentence.
A rope.
You! Over there! Pull that rope taut!
A halyard is a rope used for raising or lowering something. An example sentence would be: Pull the halyard to raise the flag.
Pull on this rope. He will pull ahead in this race soon.
A rope and pulley lessen the force needed to pull an item, but it increases the distance that you have to pull it. It also changes the direction that it moves: you pull the rope down, the item goes up.
Keep it tied to a rope and pull on the rope
Rope's. The rope's ends are starting to fray.
Tie the rope to the boat.
You can by the jump/pull rope in the discount shop, which you can walk there with your Nintendogs.
In your inventory pull the rope to the life buoy. They will combine.
Pull.