The difference between Difficult and Eath

When used as adjectives, difficult means hard, not easy, requiring much effort, whereas eath means easy.


Difficult is also verb with the meaning: to make difficult.

Eath is also adverb with the meaning: easily.

check bellow for the other definitions of Difficult and Eath

  1. Difficult as an adjective:

    Hard, not easy, requiring much effort.

    Examples:

    "However, the difficult weather conditions will ensure Yunnan has plenty of freshwater.'' [[File:However, the difficult weather conditions will ensure Yunnan has plenty of freshwater.ogg]]"

  2. Difficult as an adjective (often, _, of a, person, or a horse, etc):

    Hard to manage, uncooperative, troublesome.

    Examples:

    "Stop being difficult and eat your broccoli—you know it's good for you."

  3. Difficult as an adjective (obsolete):

    Unable or unwilling.

  1. Difficult as a verb (obsolete, transitive):

    To make difficult; to impede; to perplex.

    Examples:

    "rfquotek Sir W. Temple"

  1. Eath as an adjective (Now, _, chiefly, _, dialectal):

    Easy; not hard or difficult.

  1. Eath as an adverb (Now, _, chiefly, _, dialectal):

    Easily.

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