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Unit 7 Lesson 2

  •  English    16     Public
    adverbs of degree, too, enough
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  • The music at the party was extremely/fairly loud, and it was very hard to have a conversation.
    extremely
  •  20
  • I'm rather/really sorry for being late to the meeting.
    really
  •  20
  • I'm quite sure I left my keys on the kitchen table. ==> quite = not very OR completely?
    completely
  •  25
  • The city has too many/much traffic jams during rush hour.
    many
  •  25
  • I bought too many/much groceries, and now I can't fit them all in the fridge.
    many
  •  15
  • There's too many/much noise outside; I can't concentrate on my work.
    much
  •  15
  • There's too many/much traffic on the road during rush hour.
    much
  •  15
  • The coffee is too hot/ hot enough to drink right now; I'll have to wait for it to cool down.
    too hot
  •  15
  • Don't let her drive the car! She is too young/ young enough to drive a car legally.
    too young
  •  15
  • His explanation was enough simple/ simple enough to understand, even for beginners.
    simple enough
  •  15
  • The coffee is too hot/ hot enough, so I can enjoy without burning your tongue.
    hot enough
  •  15
  • He had enough money / money enough to buy the concert tickets.
    enough money
  •  15
  • She had time enough/ enough time to finish her homework before dinner.
    enough time
  •  15
  • She ran too slowly / slowly enough to catch the bus.
    too slowly
  •  15
  • Odd one out: extremely - fairly - really - very
    fairly
  •  5
  • Odd one out: quite - fairly - extremely - rather
    extremely
  •  5