too
/to͞o/
adverb
- to a higher degree than is desirable, permissible, or possible; excessively."he was driving too fast"Synonyme: excessively, overly, over, unduly, immoderately, inordinately, unreasonably, ridiculously, to too great an extent/degree, extremely, very, too-too
- in addition; also."is he coming too?"Synonyme: also, as well, in addition, additionally, into the bargain, besides, furthermore, moreover, yet, on top of that, to boot, plus, again, over and above
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vor 6 Tagen · Phrases Containing too · none/not too thrilled · none too · none too pleased · none too soon · not a moment too soon · not (too) shabby · not to ...
adverb. in addition; also; furthermore; moreover: young, clever, and rich too. to an excessive extent or degree; beyond what is desirable, fitting, or right:.
TOO meaning: 1. more than is needed or wanted; more than is suitable or enough: 2. used before an adjective or…. Learn more.
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/tu/ · adverb. to a degree exceeding normal or proper limits. “too big”. synonyms: excessively, overly, to a fault · adverb. in addition. “he has a Mercedes, ...
TOO meaning: 1 : in addition also often used for emphasis; 2 : more than what is wanted, needed, acceptable, possible, etc.
Adverb edit · (focus) Likewise. · (conjunctive) Also; in addition. · (degree) To an excessive degree; over; more than enough. · (degree, colloquial) To a high ...
used before adjectives and adverbs to say that something is more than is good, necessary, possible, etc. He's far too young to go on his own.