English dictionary, thesaurus, translations & etymology
FreeDict.com
adjective

tough

tuhf
adjective
1
Strong and resilient; not easily broken, worn out, or damaged.
"These work boots are made from tough leather."
2
Difficult to cut or chew, describing food.
"The steak was overcooked and tough."
3
Physically or mentally hardy; able to endure difficulty.
"You have to be tough to survive a winter that cold."
"She stayed tough through months of gruelling training."
4
Difficult or demanding, describing a situation, task, or question.
"That was a tough exam."
"We've had a tough year financially."
interjection
1
Used to show a lack of sympathy for someone's complaint.
""I don't want to go." "Tough — you're going anyway.""

How to Use Tough

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishStrong and hard to damage, or (of a situation) difficult and demanding endurance.

Common mistake

As an interjection ("Tough!"), it sounds blunt and dismissive — use it only when you deliberately want to withhold sympathy.

Common pairings
tough as nails tough luck tough call tough love

Word Forms

tougher comparative, toughed past tense, toughs plural, toughs singular, toughest superlative

Study it as flashcards or scroll it in Flow — saved to your collection.
Test yourself on “tough” A quick quiz — meaning, synonyms & usage

Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

These work boots are made from _____ leather.

Etymology

From Old English tōh, meaning "tenacious" or "sticky, holding fast together" — related to words in German (zäh) and Dutch (taai) that carry the same sense.

Rhymes for tough

See all rhymes for tough →
Definitions: FreeDict original editorial