The phrase rode hard refers to riding a horse, in a demanding manner; sometimes people ride a horse for a long distance, or at a gallop, which tires the horse out to an unusual degree. That is the literal meaning of riding hard. The term is also used as a metaphor. If anything has been "rode hard" that means you have used it in a particularly stressful manner which may tend to wear it out or damage it.
he rode his fancy horse
Rode
A palfrey is a large, cold blood horse. They were usually horses that knights, or warriors rode. The phrase a palfrey brown would mean she rode a brown horse.
what does the rode mean
it is very hard,because it is hot and long
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This was one job of a cowboy. He rode along the fences checking to see if they needed repair.
i rode a bike i rode my bike this weekend
rode
Verb: to ride; simple past: rode; past participle: ridden It would NOT be correct to say "have rode", since rode is not the participle. You would either say "we rode them" or "we have ridden them" to be correct.
Rode is not a noun at all; rode is a verb, the past tense of ride. The noun form is ride, a common noun. Example sentences:We all rode from the airport in the same limo. The ride from the airport was longer than the flight.If you mean the noun for a street or highway, it is spelled road, which is a common noun.
correct
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This means an ugly person. You never put a horse up wet with sweat, so cowboys figured that must make them ugly.