You could say The apple's skin was rather tough. The apple skin was rather tough is even better.
The phrase "the apple's skin was rather tough" involves possession, as it indicates that the toughness belongs to the skin of the apple. The apostrophe in "apple's" denotes that the skin is a characteristic of the apple itself.
a hard nut, a hard nut to crack, a hard row to hoe, a tough cookie, a tough nut, a tough row to hoe, be as tough as old boots, tough as an old boot, tough as nails, tough cookie, tough customer
ver tough
The vowel sound in tough is a short u sound, as in tub. Tough rhymes with stuff.
'get it tough' means soft Another Answer: 'Get tough' means to become more aggressive or assertive, as in "I had to get tough with my friend to let her know I wouldn't tolerate her gossiping about me anymore."
This is a possessive - "The skin of the apple" so it goes "The apple's skin was rather tough" If there's more than one apple you'd say "The apples' skins were rather tough"
The phrase "the apple's skin was rather tough" involves possession, as it indicates that the toughness belongs to the skin of the apple. The apostrophe in "apple's" denotes that the skin is a characteristic of the apple itself.
No, rather salty and tough.
The arteries should be tough,to withstand the pressure of flowing blood
The arteries should be tough,to withstand the pressure of flowing blood
Chicken is tough when it is overcooked, not undercooked. It may also be chewy. Undercooked chicken tends to be rather spongy.
Tough guise refers to violence, media, and a masculinity crisis. The phrase means that the tough guy act is just a guise or an act rather than an actuality.
we can use tough instead of hard.
The arteries shoud be tough to withstand the pressure of flowing blood.
The phrase should be "Unless you WERE brave and tough." Please see the related question below for "What rhymes with tough?"
Oranges typically have more seeds than apples. Oranges are classified as a hesperidium fruit, which is a type of berry with a tough rind and multiple seeds inside. Apples, on the other hand, are classified as pomes and generally have fewer seeds, usually around 8-10 seeds per fruit.
No. They should be taught in Parseltongue, yeah?