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 too [tu]   添加此单词到默认生词本
ad. 也, 非常, 太



    too
    [ adv ]
    1. to a degree exceeding normal or proper limits

    2. <adv.all>
      too big
    3. in addition

    4. <adv.all>
      he has a Mercedes, too


    Too \Too\, adv. [The same word as to, prep. See {To}.]
    1. Over; more than enough; -- noting excess; as, a thing is
    too long, too short, or too wide; too high; too many; too
    much.

    His will, too strong to bend, too proud to learn.
    --Cowley.

    2. Likewise; also; in addition.

    An honest courtier, yet a patriot too. --Pope.

    Let those eyes that view
    The daring crime, behold the vengeance too. --Pope.

    {Too too}, a duplication used to signify great excess.

    O that this too too solid flesh would melt. --Shak.

    Such is not Charles his too too active age.
    --Dryden.

    Syn: Also; likewise. See {Also}.

    1. The government tried to forestall any criticism from African countries that have accused it of being too cooperative with South Africa.
    2. Lawmakers say the aim is to increase voter turnout and open the nation's elections to Americans unable to leave work and stand in line at City Hall or merely too forgetful to register 30 days in advance as required in some states.
    3. "You can always pick some number and say, `Is this enough, or is this too little?"' he said.
    4. They have their political problems, too.
    5. AT&T Chairman Robert E. Allen said administrative costs are rising too rapidly and he wants to emphasize sales growth.
    6. "The burden on a publisher to avoid liability from suits of this type is too great," Davis wrote.
    7. It said NASA was trying to do too much and allowing too little margin for the unexpected, leading to frequent revamping of major programs.
    8. It said NASA was trying to do too much and allowing too little margin for the unexpected, leading to frequent revamping of major programs.
    9. His peace initiative is too important to be stopped in its tracks by the unserious custom of finding fault with his motives, or his methods or, alas too often, his results. Admittedly his score in all three areas is less than perfect.
    10. His peace initiative is too important to be stopped in its tracks by the unserious custom of finding fault with his motives, or his methods or, alas too often, his results. Admittedly his score in all three areas is less than perfect.
    11. But Charles I. Clough Jr., chief investment strategist at Merrill Lynch & Co., said it might be too early to turn aggressive.
    12. I don't want to ennoble it too much, but it's about the strength of humanity of this woman as opposed to the cold, inhumane aspect of the law that said she shouldn't help anybody, under those circumstances.
    13. Outright acquisitions of other drug makers would be too costly, he said.
    14. After the UAW pattern agreement was reached, Chrysler said the deal was too expensive.
    15. The administration adopted new guidelines that have stricter limits on the scope and length of work that can be performed by consultants, but Cotton said they are too vague.
    16. The book is only 10% too long, not bad for a family saga that spans 932 pages.
    17. I don't think you have any instance as flagrant as this one." Just how flagrant is too flagrant isn't clear under Florida law: A certain degree of "pre-petition planning," as bankruptcy lawyers like to call it, is acceptable.
    18. But he said it was "too early to say" whether those nations would abandon socialism.
    19. For individuals, the minimum face value of investments in Third World debt tends to be $1 million or more; bankers say the documentation involved in transferring such loans is too complex to justify doing trades much smaller than that.
    20. He told the Lithuanian party chief during the weekend that the independence movement in that former nation had gone too far.
    21. You have to go to the heart of the problem and close the deficit.' Treasury officials reject the criticism that they are going too slowly.
    22. If this BBC/A&E adaptation of Durrell's famous memoir has half the charm of the book it will be too good to miss.
    23. The second cause is that calorific intake is too great.
    24. Inside, signs of brutal disruption are all too evident.
    25. Members of the Nationalist old guard, in a remarkable reversal of past attitudes, have described Lee's position as too harsh.
    26. A group of gay guests, he says, raises the danger "of threatening order" at the facility by causing other guests too much anxiety.
    27. Regional companies have been cutting too but less savagely, they argue, because they had less fat.
    28. The Sinhalese front, outlawed after a failed 1971 coup, contends that the pact makes too many concessions to the Tamils and has vowed to block it.
    29. June 27 _ Bush calls for a constitutional amendment to bypass the Supreme Court ruling, saying "I will uphold our precious right to dissent, but burning the flag goes too far."
    30. What value does it have for Mr. Harwood not to have access to IL-2? Many very dedicated cancer researchers have suggested that the process of drug approval is much too slow and much too expensive to be truly responsive to the needs of cancer patients.
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