The phrase means that the question is difficult to answer. Like this one.
it means like I'm working hard but it is actually quite fun
The phrase meant "Work sets you free." It was there so internees felt their was hope if they worked hard.
The phrase "sneezing hard" is not correct grammar. The correct grammar could be a few things based on what you really meant.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant hard-pressed, in a difficulty or short of cash. Nobody likes being hard run.
Placing a question mark at the end of a phrase does not make it a sensible question. Try to use a whole phrase (sentence) to describe what it is that you want answered. What are the formulae meant to do with cubic equations?
When you ask a question it gets marked as needing an answer because it is "unanswered". This means the question has been asked but has no solution yet.
This is a phrase, not a question. We can't guess what you meant to ask about it. Please try again and be more specific.
I got a question for you: How am I meant to know? Stop asking hard questions.
This is an old Latin question posed by the poet, "Juvenal" in his "Satires". The philosopher Plato later popularized the phrase. It is a question meant to be thought over, so there is no original answer. The phrase was originally "What guardians watch over the guardians?" It is Who Watches the Watchers?"
You really need to check and re-phrase your question - it is hard ti understand what you are asking.
this
The phrase trans ocean is meant to mean across the ocean. Trans ocean is meant to be the same as transocean, which is not a word but a shorter version of transoceanic, to which it is meant to have a similar meaning.