To pull something very hard is to give it a tug. For example, you are walking your dog on a lead. The dog stops to sniff around as dogs often do. Rather than wait patiently, you give the lead a good hard tug, and continue on your walk!
It means its hard to pull someone teeth without them screaming and yelling or whatever which means it hard to teach you something without you not getting it or asking a lot of difficult question.
There is no such term as "bag pull" in the English language. Unless you mean "pull something out of a bag" which is an idiom that means to do something in the spur of the moment that solves a problem.
That means that you use a force to push or pull something.
The term "pull out" means to withdraw from something. For example, in the sport of tennis, a player can "pull out" of a tournament because of injury.
To pull something apart means to separate its parts or pieces from each other. It involves exerting force in opposite directions to disassemble or break apart an object or material.
Dissipate means when you pull something apart or something is getting forced/pulled apart.
Definitely not. You're only going to make yourself bald if you pull every single hair on your head really hard.
Pull using something else as leverage as in with a pry bar.
It means to drag really hard are and other words rough
To "pull the plug" on something usually means to stop or end it: frequently abruptly, like how an appliance will stop all of a sudden when you pull out its power cord.
The root word for "to pull away" in Latin is "trahere." It means to pull, draw, or drag something away or towards oneself.
shimmy up means to slowly pull or haul something up