-
101 too
adv.अधिक, बहुत; भी -
102 too
advმეტისმეტად, აგრეთვე -
103 too
adv.(also) -гак/-как/-як/-ак; (ad-adj, ad-adv) (very) пек, вельть -
104 too
1. adv.(also)ты г.ак н.[tygak]2. adv.(very)утыж дене н.[utyzh dene] -
105 too
туж, озьы ик -
106 too
çok, fazla, asiri; de, da, dahi, ayrica; öyle, öyle yahu -
107 too
adj.bek -
108 too
nápaka..., din, rin, man, rin naman -
109 too
kk. terlalu. t. many terlalu banyak. 2 sekali. 3 juga.She's hungry t. Dia juga lapar. 4 -pun. We t. are going Kamipun akan pergi. -
110 too
tou, trò -
111 too
(also)anki; ukoll[an'ki ukoll'] -
112 too
adv.aynı zamanda:adj.fazla -
113 too
επίσης -
114 too
adverbആവശ്യത്തിലേറെ, ഏറെ, അതുകൂടാതെ, അതിനുപുറമെ -
115 too
adv. prěmnogo · премного, prězměrno · презмерно, takože · такоже, zamnogo · замного -
116 too ... for words
too... for wordsde lo más... que hay, indescriptiblemente... -
117 too many cooks spoil the broth
muchas manos en un plato hacen mucho garabatoexpr.• muchas manos en un plato hacen un garabato expr. -
118 too many
-
119 too much
demasiado,-aadj.• demasiado, -a adj.adv.• demasiado adv.pron.• demasiado pron. -
120 too-big-to-fail-issue
too-big-to-fail-issue ECON, POL Too-big-to-fail-Problematik f (i.e. government intervention before the bankruptcy of ’important’ or 'systemic' firms)Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > too-big-to-fail-issue
См. также в других словарях:
too — W1S1 [tu:] adv [: Old English; Origin: to to, too ] 1.) [+ adjective/adverb] more than is acceptable or possible ▪ Do you think the music s too loud? ▪ You ve put too much salt in the soup. ▪ There are too many cars on the road. much/far too ▪ … Dictionary of contemporary English
too — [ tu ] adverb *** Too is used in the following ways: as an ordinary adverb (before an adjective or adverb or before much, many, few, etc.): You re too young to understand politics. as a way of showing how a sentence, clause, or phrase is related… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Too — Too, adv. [The same word as to, prep. See {To}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Over; more than enough; noting excess; as, a thing is too long, too short, or too wide; too high; too many; too much. [1913 Webster] His will, too strong to bend, too proud to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
too — too; cock·a·too; dus·too·ree; gen·too; po·too; tap·pie·too·rie; tat·too·er; too·lach; too·ner·ville; too·tler; wap·a·too; tat·too; too·na; too·tle; dus·too·ri; pat·too; rat·tat·too; tat·too·ist; tick·tack·too; … English syllables
too — 1. Too is the normal word used to qualify an adjective or adverb to denote excess: The house is too large / I spoke too soon. It should not be used to qualify a participial adjective when this could not idiomatically be qualified by very: She was … Modern English usage
Too — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: C. C. Too (1920–1992), malaysischer Diplomat Daniel Kirwa Too (* 1976), kenianischer Marathonläufer Daniel Kiprugut Too (* 1978), kenianischer Marathonläufer David Kimutai Too (1968–2008), kenianischer… … Deutsch Wikipedia
too — [to͞o] adv. [stressed form of TO1, with differentiated sp.] 1. in addition; as well; besides; also 2. more than enough; superfluously; overly [the hat is too big] 3. to a regrettable extent [that s too bad!] 4. ext … English World dictionary
too — (adv.) in addition, in excess, late Old English, stressed variant of Old English prep. to in the direction of, furthermore (see TO (Cf. to)). The spelling with oo is first recorded 1590. Use after a verb, for emphasis (e.g. did, too!) is attested … Etymology dictionary
too — ► ADVERB 1) to a higher degree than is desirable, permissible, or possible. 2) in addition. 3) informal very. ● none too Cf. ↑none too ORIGIN Old English, stressed form of TO(Cf. ↑ … English terms dictionary
too — [adv1] also additionally, along, as well, besides, further, furthermore, in addition, into the bargain, likewise, more, moreover, to boot, withal; concepts 544,771 too [adv2] excessively awfully, beyond, ever, exceptionally, exorbitantly,… … New thesaurus
too — index also Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary