Your operative word is 'tougher'. If you'd asked 'harder' instead, the answer would be 'no'. Tougher requires usefulness.
Since your question does not relate to gemstones, but to industrial uses of the diamond mineral, and since your question doesn't yet have an application in industrial uses, your question is a scientific question.
From Wikipedia:
"Aggregated diamond nanorods, or ADNRs (also called a hyperdiamond), are a nanocrystalline form of diamond. These are synonymous with the more conventional (and perhaps more justified) term "nanodiamond". Nanodiamond was convincingly demonstrated to be produced by compression of graphite in 2003 and in the same work found to be much harder than bulk diamond, which makes it the hardest known material."
Read more, below.
No. Otherwise all our tools would be made with cheap toffee-tipped coatings, not expensive diamond-tipped coatings And they're not.
Diamond is the hardest natural gemstone, scoring a 10 on the Mohs scale of mineral hardness. This makes diamond significantly tougher than other gemstones, such as sapphires and rubies, which rank lower on the scale.
diamond
While diamonds are one of the hardest natural materials, they cannot cut through everything in the world. Diamond is unable to cut through all substances, especially those that are tougher and harder than it, such as other diamonds or ultra-hard materials like ceramics or certain metals. While diamond has exceptional hardness, it is not invincible and has limitations to what it can cut through.
There is actually no scientifically accepted 'hardest' substance known to man and there are a lot of debates over this.It's a common misconception that diamond is the hardest but variations of substances like Boron and minerals like Lonsdaleite are actually tougher than diamonds.
The phrase "tougher than Wang" likely refers to a colloquial expression or a specific context that isn’t widely recognized. However, if taken literally, one might argue that various materials such as steel or diamond are tougher than any person named Wang. In a broader sense, challenges like overcoming personal hardships or facing adversity could also be considered "tougher" than any individual.
do lots of trainer battles but make sure your Finneon is first in your party. do lots of trainer battles and as soon as you battle them switch to a tougher Pokemon and make it beat the trainers Pokemon your Finneon and tougher Pokemon will both get lots of exp which will level it up quicker and evolve it quicker it'll help if your tougher Pokemon and Finneon is holding an exp share hope this helped!
: Diamond is the hardest gem. : : It is the only gem to rank a 10 on the 1 to 10 Mohs hardness scale. When we talk about "hardness," we're talking about a gem's ability to withstand scratching. As the hardest gem, diamond can scratch, or cut, any other stone, but only a diamond can scratch a diamond. : After diamond, the next hardest gem is sapphire. Even though sapphire ranks 9 on the Mohs scale, it is not nearly as hard as diamond. : Neither diamond or sapphire, however, is the *toughest* gem. That distinction belongs to nephrite, a type of jade. Toughness measures resistance to breaking, and nephrite jade is tougher than both diamond and sapphire.
Diamond a weak material and can be cleaved very easily. However it is the one of the hardest materials on the planet. Titanium is a very tough an strong metal having great toughness and tensile and compressive strength. Hardness and strength are not the same. Glass is extremely hard but extremely weak.
girls are tougher
Tails is definitely tougher!!
Mike is TOUGHER than jacob