It is hard for a neutral-faced girl with a fixed opinion of her own importance to learn the lesson of her real insignificance, when removed from the background of home, at a place like Caryl's.
Down below in the open valley the heat was unbroken; and to be wet and warm, and obliged to exert all one's strength at the same time, is hard for a large man like Gregory Dexter.
Tis the first time in your life that you have been thwarted, and therefore it is hard for you to succumb.
It is hard for me to refuse any thing to the one whose skilful hand restored me to life," replied the empress, while she reached her hand to Van Swieten.
Pardon me, imperial majesty; these dreadful German names are too hard for my Italian tongue.
Tis as hard for an Enemy to detract from as for a Friend to add to his Praise.
Behold I am the Lord the God of all flesh: shall any thing be hard for me?
You have made me glad, I cannot deny it; but it is hard for me to yield the point and send you forth to this battle, when I see you still so young.
Tell me what your orders are, for nothing can be so hard as to cause me any work or pain or be hard for me to execute.
He will never know in advance, I think, the hour when this hope will play him false, for if he overstays by single day the term which he has agreed upon, it will be hard for him to gain again his lady's pardon and goodwill.
Whatever the outcome may be, it is hard for my lord Yvain to restrain himself from running forward to seize her hands.
But the life had proved too hard for him, all the same.
This made it hard for him to explain the present prolonged spell of dullness.
And if he refused, they would make it hard for him to earn a decent living in their midst.
Again, I have omitted the literature of the Anglo-Saxon period, which is written in a language nearly as hard for a modern Englishman to read as German is, or Dutch.
Her screams are still ringing in my ears, and it's hard for me to pull myself together.
Don't you think it's hard for me to see this life?
MAN It's hard for an old man to bend his old knees.
It's hard forme to tell you--for me to understand.
An' Moore, you be a man an' don't make it so hard for her.
Wade reflected that it would be hard for rustlers or horse-thieves to steal out of those corrals.
He'd generalize fast enough about the world at large, but it would always behard for him to include her and himself in his generalizations.
This is--hard for us both, and it isn't getting us anywhere.
Lying and pretending were always terriblyhard for Rose, and a lie to any one she was fond of, almost impossible.
Oh, well they might imagine it Hard for chivalry's ranks to show A knight more gallant to face a foe, With a firmer lance or a heavier blow, Than Richard I.
It is hard for us to believe it, though we daily see it is the way even of all the earth, to return thither again: "For dust thou art, and to dust shalt thou return.
If you use unfamiliar words, it sometimes will be hard forhim to understand what you mean.
I'm going to make it hard for anybody to get away from me after I tackle him to buy a lot or a house.
It would be just as hard for a prospect to say 'No' to me as it has been for you.
It is likely to be hard for him to win success among people who knew him as a boy and who still regard him as immature.
Sidenote: Ethical Essentials] Nor is it hard for you to qualify yourself ethically for mastery of the selling process.
He writes me very indefinitely, and sometimes it is hard for me to learn, even when I am with him, just what he is doing.
How could she explain to this muscular fellow, whose pale-faced mother had no creed but what Lloyd thought or wanted or liked, that it was their unspoken grief that made it hard for her?
Do not think that what is hard for thee to master is impossible for man; but if a thing is possible and proper to man, deem it attainable by thee.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hard for" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.