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Hardly like a walk in the park
Answer for the clue "Hardly like a walk in the park ", 5 letters:
rough
Alternative clues for the word rough
Word definitions for rough in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Rough may refer to: Roughness Rough (golf) , the area outside the fairway on a golf course Rough (manga) Rough (facility) , gas storage in England Rough (album) , released by Tina Turner in 1978 Rough (film) , a 2013 film Remi Rough , an English street ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1200, "broken ground," from rough (adj.). Meaning "a rowdy" is first attested 1837. Specific sense in golf is from 1901. Phrase in the rough "in an unfinished or unprocessed condition" (of timber, etc.) is from 1819.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rough \Rough\, n. Boisterous weather. [Obs.] --Fletcher. A rude fellow; a coarse bully; a rowdy. In the rough , in an unwrought or rude condition; unpolished; as, a diamond or a sketch in the rough. Contemplating the people in the rough. --Mrs. Browning.
Usage examples of rough.
As she leaned against the wall of the house, the rough texture of the red brick gently abraded her bare shoulders.
The rough tips stroked, teased, and then he caught her abraded clit between two fingers.
The people hauled in to testify about why they voted absentee offered a vivid picture of the fierce loyalties, rough politics, and economic pressures that shaped the lives of Arkansas hill people.
Bay flattened herself against the rough adobe wall and held her hands out in front of her as he started walking toward her.
Walking through a wall in the pitch black, feeling the rough adobe as she made her way blindly down a secret passageway, was sensible?
Another two strides, and he almost tripped over Issgrillikk - his agemate, friend, and foster-cousin - twisted around himself in pain at the base of one of the Great Trees, his claws gouging up the rough, grey-brown bark and tearing long white streaks into the inner wood.
Issgrillikk - his agemate, friend, and foster-cousin - twisted around himself in pain at the base of one of the Great Trees, his claws gouging up the rough, grey-brown bark and tearing long white streaks into the inner wood.
When it was over and Thure and Bud again gave their attention to the court, Bill Ugger was about to continue with his testimony, the majority of the crowd having shown themselves so plainly in sympathy with the actions of the alcalde that the rougher ones evidently thought it wise to keep quiet.
Chained again in his corner of the drafry t Vcell, Alec turned his face to the rough stone wall and sobbed until his chest ached.
More locks, more tools, rough chunks of metal and wood, and a number of devices whose uses Alec could not guess were mixed indiscriminately among masks, carvings, musical instruments of all descriptions, animal skulls, dried plants, fine pottery, glittering crystals-there was no rhyme or reason apparent in the arrangement.
Gradually, Seregil introduced Alec to more clandestine procedures-a little innocent housebreaking, or making a game of evading the notice of the Harbor Watch in the rough byways of the Lower City.
Studying them in the red sunset light, Alec could see that they were hard-faced characters in rough traveling garb.
There is not simply an inquiry as to the value of classic culture, a certain jealousy of the schools where it is obtained, a rough popular contempt for the graces of learning, a failure to see any connection between the first aorist and the rolling of steel rails, but there is arising an angry protest against the conditions of a life which make one free of the serene heights of thought and give him range of all intellectual countries, and keep another at the spade and the loom, year after year, that he may earn food for the day and lodging for the night.
Their long-armed, apish forms seemed adapted to the rough going--the way was almost half steady climbing up, and down.
And yet I have seen a sprig of arbutus in rough and clumsy buttonholes on weather-faded lapels which, the rest of the twelve-month through, know no other flower.