late 14c., "want of easiness, that quality which makes something laborious or perplexing," from Anglo-French difficulté and directly from Latin difficultatem (nominative difficultas) "difficulty, distress, poverty," from difficilis "hard," from dis- "not, away from" (see dis-) + facilis "easy to do," from facere "to do" (from PIE root *dhe- "to set, put"). From 1610s as "that which is difficult." Related: Difficulties.
finished the test only with great difficulty
had difficulty walking
they agreed about the difficulty of the climb
different
differential
differentiate
differentiation
difficult
difficulty
diffidence
diffident
diffract
diffraction
diffuse