Too adverb (1) more than enough.e.g. the coffee was too hot to drink. (2) in addition, as well. e.g. snakes and lizards are reptiles. Turtles are too.

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too adverb (1) more than enough.e.g. the coffee was too hot to drink. (2) in addition, as well. e.g. snakes and lizards are reptiles. Turtles are too. Grammar patterns 1. too +adjective + for +NP: e.g. Is the doctor in? ~I’m afraid you’re too late. She’s jus left. 2. Too +adjective/adverb + too-infinitive: e.g. Ten blocks! That’s too far to walk. 3. Too + much/many/little/a few + NP: e.g. Stop! That’s too much

too Collocations Adjectives and adverbs that are frequently followed by too are: early, easy, hard, late, little, long, low and small. e. g. Are we too late to get a table? Adverbs that go before too include: a bit, much, for, a lot, and rather. e.g. Friendly? He was too friendly!

too Set phrases too bad. Judy didn’t get that job. Too bad! me, too. I’m freezing. Me too (all/only) too true. That many athletes take drugs is all too true. Too good to be true. He’s handsome, intelligent and rich. It’s too good to be true. Too clever by half. The film was too clever by half; all those flashbacks and endless close-ups.