|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Learning English - The Flatmates | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Used with adjectives:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
We put too before the adjective and we put enough after the adjective.
|
We put enough before nouns.
We use too much/ too little before uncountable nouns.
We use too many/too few before countable nouns.
| Uncountable nouns: | Countable nouns: |
| I have enough water | I have enough shirts |
| You don't have enough water | You don't have enough shirts |
| You have too little water | You have too few shirts |
| He has too much water | He has too many shirts |
We put too before the adverb and we put enough after the adverb.
| She drives too quickly | He works too hard |
| You drive carefully enough to pass your driving test | You work hard enough |
| She doesn't drive carefully enough | I don't work hard enough |
With some verbs, we can use too much and enough like adverbs. We rarely use too little in this way, although it is possible.
| I worry too much | She's written too much | You think too much about your problems |
| I don't relax enough | I've written enough | He doesn't think enough about his friends |
to take the plunge (idiom): a hangover: greedy: a date: |
Last 3 episodesLast 3 language pointsLast 3 quizzes |