it is hard if you don't get it or if you didn't study. it will be easy if you study it and you get everything.
Study hard to earn better grades on future assignments and tests.
Only if you don't study...
Practice and study hard:)
if you study real hard
"Hit the books."
Life Is Sometimes Hard
Hit the Books: to prepare for classes by reading and doing all your assigned homework It means to study - you're "hitting" as in coming into contact with, or impacting, your books; you're opening them and reading.
It's not an idiom. "Fruits" means the end result of something, so "fruits of labor" would be what you earned from hard work.
Hard nosed
The idiom "a nut to crack" has the basic meaning of "a problem to solve." Some "nuts" are hard to "crack," while others are easy, but this can only be determined by context.
it is hard if you don't get it or if you didn't study. it will be easy if you study it and you get everything.
if you study hard its not. but if you don't study its hard.
That phrase must be an idiom, because I can't understand what it means."It's raining cats and dogs" is an idiom for "it's raining really hard.""I am learning about idioms in English class."Timmy was the apple of my eye".This sentence is an example of an idiom.
A quick study is someone who learns very fast. You would say "he's a quick study" if you're training someone and they really catch on well. It means someone who's really smart.
An idiom is a phrase that makes no sense unless you know the idiomatic definition. Do you think that laughing would really kill you? No, so this is an idiom. It just means he laughed very hard.
Study. Study very hard. Study very, very hard. Oh, did I say study?