Spell Tough


Spell Tough. It sounds like borough, scarborough, boroughbridge. Splitting the word into two parts can help.

Spells for Tough times by Kerri Connor
Spells for Tough times by Kerri Connor from www.thedragonsscale.com

Look at the eau sounds. Another word we aren’t embarrassed to admit can be hard to spell is, well, embarrass. One thing that might trip you up is the ending—it sounds like uhs, but is spelled, well, ass.

(Of Food, Especially Meat) Difficult To Cut Or Chew.


This is unusual, but it’s also found in the word beauty. at the end of the word, the cy is making a see sound. It's the guy ritchie rocco 'n' roll show. Of viscous consistency, as liquid or semiliquid matter:

Difficult To Perform, Accomplish, Or Deal With.


Lift him off his feet; Nobody is incorrectly using “tough” instead of the proper “tuff,” since it. But a careful reading of the question seems to imply that “tuff” is actually correct.

Pharaoh (Correct) / Farow (Incorrect) Intelligence (Correct) / Inteligense (Incorrect) Didactic (Correct) / Didachtik (Incorrect)


This is because most people write it as ‘separate’ misplacing the ‘a’ following the ‘p’ with an ‘e’. Association atmosphere bicycle corollary confetti defalcation bizarre braggadocio echelon gelatinous panache xylem; This list of 50 difficult words features many words with confusion about doubling consonants.

We Continued To Review And Cull Words Until We’ve Selected What We Perceive To Be A List Of The Hardest And Most Difficult Words To Spell.


Another word we aren’t embarrassed to admit can be hard to spell is, well, embarrass. The second most commonly misspelled word is definitely. Durable, strong, resilient, resistant, sturdy, rugged, firm, solid, substantial, sound, stout, indestructible, unbreakable, hard, rigid, stiff, inflexible, toughened.

The Word Is Correctly Spelled “Tough.”.


Just like spelling “ingenious” and these other hardest words to spell correctly, using these words will make you sound smart. If you are writing about a specific commercial product that includes tuff as part of a proper name, this usage is also acceptable. Feeling physical discomfort or pain (`tough' is occasionally used colloquially for `bad') unfortunate or hard to bear.