Citations:tough cookie

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of tough cookie

Noun: "(idiomatic) a person who can endure physical or mental hardship; a hardened, strong-willed person"[edit]

1973 1988 1997 2000 2002 2004 2005 2006 2007
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1973 — "Ioannidis: Power in the Wings," Time, 10 December 1973:
    An austere, hard-lining rightist, who lives alone, Ioannidis is described by one Washington military official as "a real tough cookie."
  • 1988Roger MacBride Allen, Orphan of Creation: Contact with the Human Past, FoxAcre Press (2010), →ISBN, page 277:
    Amanda liked to think of herself as a tough cookie, hard to rattle, but this crowd got her nervous.
  • 1997 — Valerie Walkerdine, Daddy's Girl: Young Girls and Popular Culture, Harvard University Press (1998), →ISBN, page 90:
    But here is not Barker's grim pessimism, nor a happy-ever-after, over-the-rainbow ending, but a tough cookie fighting, surviving, taking hard knocks, but keeping going and winning.
  • 2000 — Elizabeth Adler, All or Nothing, Island Books (2000), →ISBN, page 116:
    Reminded him of his dead wife, Imogen — from Imogen's portrait I thought she looked like a real tough cookie. Hard as nails would be the way I would describe her."
  • 2002Meg Cabot, She Went All the Way, HarperCollins (2002), →ISBN, page 346:
    After all, she was one tough cookie. She'd survived seventy-two hours on Mount McKinley. She'd survived a mine blast. She'd survived Bruno di Blase. She could survive Jack Townsend. No problem.
  • 2002Picabo Street (with Dana White), Picabo: Nothing to Hide, Contemporary Books (2002), →ISBN, page 6:
    I run to Micki and give her a hug. She was racing with a broken thumb — a tough cookie, just like me.
  • 2004 — Alison Acker & Betty Brightwell, Off Our Rockers and into Trouble: The Raging Grannies, TouchWood Editions Ltd. (2004), →ISBN, page 9:
    Having to use crutches is hard, after a very active life, including a hike in the Himalayas, but she's a tough cookie.
  • 2005 — Liz Austin, "Miers had stormy tenure at Texas Lottery Commision," Spokesman-Review, 3 October 2005:
    "Although she's a small-framed woman, we all believed she came through the Marines and maybe ate nails for breakfast because she’s one tough cookie," said Horace Taylor []
  • 2006 — Bill Norris, Turn His Other Cheek, Tate Publishing LLC (2006), →ISBN, page 193:
    [] He must be some tough cookie to survive a shot to the head."
  • 2007Dennis J. Kucinich, The Courage to Survive, Phoenix Books (2007), →ISBN, page 87:
    If ever there was a survivor, it was Aunt Ann. She was one tough cookie.
  • 2007 — Carole O'Malley Gaunt, Hungry Hill: A Memoir, University of Massachusetts Press (2007), →ISBN, page 129:
    "I'm sorry it happened, Carole. You're a tough cookie. You'll forget about it. []

Noun: "(idiomatic) a hardy, resilient animal or plant"[edit]

1997 2001 2005 2006 2009 2010
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1997Aquarium Atlas (eds. Hans A. Baensch & Rüdiger Riehl; trans. Gero W. Fischer & Shellie E. Borrer), Hans A. Baensch, →ISBN, page 726:
    This species is a "tough cookie". It could even be caught in waters contaminated with crude oil.
  • 2001 — Sybille Engels, Basic Gardening: Everything You Need to Make Your Garden Grow, Silverback Books (2001), →ISBN, page 134:
    Boxwood is a pretty tough cookie. Wind, cold, wet, exhaust fumes, and industrial pollution are of no consequence.
  • 2005 — Pam Lewis, Sticky Wicket: Gardening in Tune with Nature, Frances Lincoln Limited (2007), →ISBN, page 62:
    Lonicera rupicola var. syringantha is a rather rambling shrug that is early-flowering and sweetly scented, and has just a few red berries for birds. This is a tough cookie and uncomplainingly puts up with the occasional violent assault necessary to keep it vaguely in bounds.
  • 2006 — Jane Bath, The Landscape Design Answer Books: More Than 300 Specific Design Solutions for Your Landscape, Cool Springs Press (2006), →ISBN, page 152:
    The top is so delicate, but even the smallest plants will have strong full roots that tell you that the clematis will be a tough cookie when it's established.
  • 2006 — Michael Gilbert, The Disposable Male: Sex, Love, and Money — Your World Through Darwin's Eyes, The Hunter Press (2006), →ISBN, pages 122-123:
    Then there is that gazelle, hopping conspicuously up and down as a hungry lion approaches. Some people who study these things believe she may not be warning other gazelles: instead, she may be talking to the lion, advertising the fact that she's a tough cookie so he better pick on someone else.
  • 2006 — "Katrina Cat", Jet, 13 March 2006
    Though its name is Cupcake, Tristan Carter's cat proved it was one tough cookie surviving on its own since Hurricane Katrina forced Carter to abandon it []
  • 2009 — Annie Innis Dagg, The Social Behavior of Older Animals, Johns Hopkins University Press (2009), →ISBN, page 78:
    She may have been inferior in rank because of an accident of birth (the date she was born), but she was one tough cookie. Unlike other pronghorns in her age class, GY was able to survive through the summer droughts and winter storms, produce two fawns year after year, and roam the glorious wilds of Montana.
  • 2010 — Ray Rogers, The Encyclopedia of Container Plants: More than 500 Outstanding Choices for Gardeners, Timber Press (2010), →ISBN, page 167:
    Anything that's been around since before Tyrannosaurus rex and his buddies did their thunder-lizard thing on this planet is one tough cookie.

Noun: "(idiomatic) something troublesome or difficult to handle"[edit]

2001 2002 2003 2007
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2001 — Barbara Curtiss, To the Rescue: Helping Homeless Purebred Dogs, Writers Press Club (2001), →ISBN, page 30:
    "As for her behavior, she was a tough cookie. A very complex dog. She's apparently never been housebroken, although when I took her she was just over a year old. []
  • 2001 — Elaine Mercado, Grave's End: A True Ghost Story, Llewellyn Publications, →ISBN, page 5:
    "How bad? They intimidate everyone who comes to this house. Especially his uncle. He's more than a 'tough cookie' — he's nasty and impossible, and I'm getting sick and tired of it. []
  • 2002Encyclopedia of North American Sporting Dogs (ed. Steven Smith), Willow Creek Press (2002), →ISBN, page 63:
    The pup that struggles constantly might be one tough cookie when it comes to training; []
  • 2003 — Michelle Cunnah, 32AA, HarperCollins (2003), →ISBN, page 77:
    And although Rachel is one tough cookie, she is not usually a bitch.
  • 2007 — Brian Lovett, Hunting Pressured Turkeys, Stackpole Books (2007), →ISBN, page 3:
    And if a gobbler anywhere is henned up, he's one tough cookie to kill.