Well, theParser gave you examples of the words in use, and I gave you links to dictionary definitions, which also had examples of the words in use. Unless you provide specific examples of sentences in which you don't know which one to use, there is not much more we can do.I want to do this quiz but I can't!.....I don't know the differences between 'so', 'too' and 'very'!
Well, theParser gave you examples of the words in use, and I gave you links to dictionary definitions, which also had examples of the words in use. Unless you provide specific examples of sentences in which you don't know which one to use, there is not much more we can do.
Try those, and then we'll look at the others.I mean this quiz. I read the dictionary difinition but I can't do this!
Q1 - The coffee was ____ hot that I couldn't drink it.
Q2 - The coffee was ____ hot to drink.
TheParser's examples should help you get those.
Q3 - The bus was ____ crowded..... too/very
Either could be used here.
True, but with no more context than you have, 'very' is more likely; we'd need a reason for it to be too crowded.
Q5 - It was ____ good that I rushed out and bought it.
Q8 - He was ___rude that I lost my temper.
Q9 - Was it ____ expensive to buy?
Q10 - It cost ___ much that I didn't buy it.
TheParser's examples should help you get those.
Because that is not the way these words are used. We can say any of these:In Q1 correct answer is 'so' .why we can't use 'too' and 'very'.spaceI think they are possible too!
Because that is not the way these words are used. We can say any of these:
The coffee was so hot that I couldn't drink it.
The coffee was (very) hot, and so I couldn't drink it.
The coffee was very hot, and I couldn't drink it.
The coffee was too hot to drink.
The various words are used in different ways.
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