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hard time

NOUN
  1. a difficulty that can be overcome with effort
    analysts predicted rough sledding for handset makers
    we had a hard time getting here
  2. a term served in a maximum security prison

How To Use hard time In A Sentence

  • People have done hard time in stir for a good deal less, but of course they didn't own e-tail outfits.
  • Of course, I don't know what the relevant understandings were on the Judiciary committee, but I have a hard time working myself into a high moral dudgeon over it.
  • Yes, it means a re-think of the way we give, but it promises to truly lift up lives in these hard times and bring us back to the true definition of the word 'philanthropy,' which literally means "the love of humanity. Melanie Lundquist: Time to Change the Way We Give
  • No matter what happens to our nation, even when Egypt may fall on hard times, we can never be ignored.
  • Some time later he experienced hard times and was forced to sell some of his land.
  • This is a real trip around the world, into some unexpected nooks and crannies, and for new sounds to satisfy your wanderlust, you might have a hard time doing better.
  • Sadly, the pace slows down considerably at the one-hour mark, and the film has a hard time recovering the sense of rollicking adventure supplied by the first half.
  • Now is the time to give it a boost and put some energy back before the hard times. Times, Sunday Times
  • Daniel said that the centre had given him support and stability through hard times.
  • In The Victim, the Jewish son of an anti-gentile and ghetto-mentality storekeeper is being given a hard time by an insecure and alcoholic WASP. The Great Assimilator
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