Advertisement

Advertisement

hard-knock life

[hahrd-nok lahyf]

noun

  1. a rough life; a life full of hardship and struggle.

    Even with the hard-knock life she had growing up, she never adopts a victim mentality.



Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of hard-knock life1

First recorded in 1975–80
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

I suppose that’s why we continue to blithely share that tune with kids—Annie Jr. remains a popular production in children’s theaters, and though it’s abridged, the junior version features not just “It’s the Hard-Knock Life” but its reprise.

From

But when I really close-read Annie’s hard-knock life, I couldn’t help but zero in on how bizarre it is—and how bizarre it is that we still love her so much.

From

An unreliable but exploitable rumor about PJ and Josie’s hard-knock life in juvie leads our heroines to their Big Idea: starting a self-defense club for females, with noble intentions up front but a yen to get close to the gorgeous, popular girls as a bonus.

From

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Holocaust is never mentioned, but Grobglas' character does speak to antisemitic treatment abroad and rough living conditions in New York; the kind of hard-knock life that paves the path for makeshift community centers, like Jewish delis, to provide comfort for those who've lost quite a bit.

From

But what became increasingly obvious with each crunchy step of survey work, is that a live tortoise lingering in this landscape is in for a hard-knock life.

From

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


hard-knockhard knocks