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"
Generally you would not. Summers is the plural of summer, so if you are wondering about the plural form of the word, you definitely would not. Look at these examples. John is a very tough youngster. He has a boy's sense of daring and adventure. Boy's is a possessive form, when one boy is involved. The team played hard all afternoon. The boys' uniforms needed a serious washing. This is the plural possessive form. You could use a plural possessive form for summer, but I would bet that the sentence would be awkward, and would be better if you re-worked it without the need for the word summers'.
Canvas. A piece of coarse material used for sails, tough clothing, or painting medium.
tough in Tagalog: matigas; astig
The suffix of the word tough is "-gh."
No. Stir is a verb, and the word tough would not modify it. The word tough is normally an adjective, but may be used informally as an adverb in forms such as "hang tough" (in "stay tough" it is an adjective, as stay functions as a linking verb meaning remain).
You could say The apple's skin was rather tough. The apple skin was rather tough is even better.
No, rather salty and tough.
Correct, backbones are missing from arthropods because they are exoskeletal, having a tough outer skeleton rather than an internal skeleton (endoskeleton) like mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and so forth.
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.
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.
Awry - this is a tough word to spell and spell check won't help at all.
The correct way to spell tough is tough. um, you spelled it correctly. :)
No. (it is not scriptually correct) Thou Shall Not Kill. Note: You ask a hard question, not for me to answer but rather for the reader to understand. Your body is a gift from God, you should always take care of it. Yet I saw them take out the breathing tube of my grandmother because they told me she was brain dead. This is a really tough personal decision but if you are asking me about God's will, it is not correct, it would technically be murder.
Nice guys = HOT Great person Not tough
Generally you would not. Summers is the plural of summer, so if you are wondering about the plural form of the word, you definitely would not. Look at these examples. John is a very tough youngster. He has a boy's sense of daring and adventure. Boy's is a possessive form, when one boy is involved. The team played hard all afternoon. The boys' uniforms needed a serious washing. This is the plural possessive form. You could use a plural possessive form for summer, but I would bet that the sentence would be awkward, and would be better if you re-worked it without the need for the word summers'.
Canvas. A piece of coarse material used for sails, tough clothing, or painting medium.