A2

Enough / Too Exercises PDFSet 2: Too and Enough with To-Infinitives

20 questions·14 min·Answers included·Explanations included

Practice Online

Preview: Questions

Fill in the blank with the correct option.

1.He is ___ young to get a driving licence.

a) toob) enoughc) veryd) so

2.She is experienced ___ to handle this project alone.

a) toob) veryc) enoughd) so

3.The movie was ___ good. I really enjoyed it.

a) toob) enoughc) veryd) enough of

4.This suitcase is ___ heavy to carry up the stairs.

a) enoughb) tooc) veryd) so

5.Are you brave ___ to jump from that height?

a) toob) veryc) sod) enough

... and 15 more questions in the PDF

Preview: Answers

1.too

2.enough

3.very

4.too

5.enough

... and 15 more answers in the PDF

Preview: Explanations

1."too"(a)

Use 'too + adjective + to-infinitive' to say that something is more than necessary for an action. He is younger than the minimum age required.

2."enough"(c)

Use 'adjective + enough + to-infinitive' to say someone has a sufficient quality. She has sufficient experience.

3."very"(c)

Use 'very' (not 'too') to emphasise something in a positive or neutral way. 'Very good' means 'extremely good'. 'Too good' would mean 'excessively good', which doesn't fit this positive context.

4."too"(b)

Use 'too + adjective + to-infinitive'. The suitcase is heavier than what is possible to carry upstairs.

5."enough"(d)

Use 'adjective + enough + to-infinitive'. 'Brave enough to jump' means 'sufficiently brave to jump'.

... and 15 more explanations in the PDF

Prefer practicing online?

Try our interactive exercises with instant feedback.