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rocky (adj.)

"full of rocks," c. 1400, from rock (n.1) + -y (2); "unsteady," 1737, from rock (v.1). Meaning "difficult, hard" is recorded from 1873, and may represent a bit of both.

The Rocky Mountains were so called by 1802, translating French Montagnes Rocheuses, first applied to the Canadian Rockies. "The name is not directly self-descriptive but is an approximate translation of the name of the former Native American people here known as the Assiniboin .... The mountains are in fact not noticeably rocky" [Room]. Bright notes that "These Indians were called /assiniipwaan/, lit. 'stone Sioux', by their Cree (Algonkian) neighbors".

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Definitions of rocky from WordNet

rocky (adj.)
abounding in rocks or stones;
rocky fields
Synonyms: bouldery / bouldered / stony
rocky (adj.)
causing or characterized by jolts and irregular movements;
Synonyms: rough / bumpy / jolty / jolting / jumpy
rocky (adj.)
liable to rock;
on high rocky heels
rocky (adj.)
full of hardship or trials;
the rocky road to success
Synonyms: rough
From wordnet.princeton.edu