Difficile means 'difficult'
Il est difficile or elle est difficile, depending on the gender of the noun you are talking about.
Difficile as an adjective meaning difficult can be masculine of feminine. Difficile as a noun can be either masculine or feminine.
Difficile is a French equivalent of 'difficult'. It's pronounced 'dee-fee-seel'. There's just one form each, in the singular and the plural, for 'difficult' critters, objects and peoples.
"Rough" in French can be translated as "rugueux" or "rude".
If you mean "hard," as in the relative resistance of a physical object (e.g., "This brick is hard."): dur (mas. singular), dure (fem. singular), durs (mas. plural), dures (fem. plural) If you mean "hard," as in not being easy (e.g., "This differential equations test is hard."): difficile (both genders, singular), difficiles (both genders, plural)
la langue française est difficile orle français, c'est difficile! orle français est difficile
Il est difficile or elle est difficile, depending on the gender of the noun you are talking about.
Je le trouve difficile or Il m'est difficile. Je trouve difficile
It means "But French is very difficult"
Difficile as an adjective meaning difficult can be masculine of feminine. Difficile as a noun can be either masculine or feminine.
Difficile
If you mean "hard" as in difficult, it's "difficile". It is "dur(e)" if you are referring to "hard" work or describe something firm. If you want to say "hard" evidence, it is "solide."
facile (easy)
Difficile is a French equivalent of 'difficult'. It's pronounced 'dee-fee-seel'. There's just one form each, in the singular and the plural, for 'difficult' critters, objects and peoples.
"Rough" in French can be translated as "rugueux" or "rude".
C'est trop difficile.
trop difficile à tenir