Introduction
Have you ever said “This coffee is too hot” or “I don’t have enough money”? These two small words—too and enough—cause a surprising amount of confusion for English learners. They look simple, but their grammar rules are different. Getting them right will make your English sound much more natural. In this post, we’ll break down the rules, show you common mistakes, and give you practice so you can use too and enough with confidence.
What Is the Difference Between Too and Enough?
Too means more than necessary, more than wanted, or more than is good. It has a negative meaning. For example: “The bag is too heavy.” (You cannot carry it.)
Enough means as much as necessary, sufficient. It has a neutral or positive meaning. For example: “The bag is light enough.” (You can carry it.)
The key difference is: too = excessive; enough = sufficient.
Rules for Using Too and Enough
- Too + Adjective/Adverb
Use too before an adjective or adverb (without a noun).
Example: “This soup is too salty.” (adjective)
Example: “He drives too fast.” (adverb) - Too + Adjective + to + Infinitive
Show a result: “The box is too heavy to lift.” - Too much / Too many + Noun
Use too much with uncountable nouns and too many with countable plural nouns.
Example: “I have too much work.” (uncountable)
Example: “There are too many people.” (countable) - Adjective/Adverb + Enough
Place enough after an adjective or adverb.
Example: “This room is big enough.” (adjective + enough)
Example: “She doesn’t speak loudly enough.” (adverb + enough) - Enough + Noun
Place enough before a noun.
Example: “We have enough chairs.” - Enough + to + Infinitive
Show purpose: “He is old enough to drive.”
How to Use Too and Enough Step by Step
Step 1: Decide the meaning
Ask yourself: Is this excessive (too) or sufficient (enough)? If it’s more than you want, use too. If it’s exactly what you need, use enough.
Step 2: Check the word order
- For too: It comes before adjectives and adverbs. (too hot, too quickly)
- For enough: It comes after adjectives and adverbs, but before nouns. (big enough, enough time)
Step 3: Add extra structure if needed
Use too + adjective + to + verb to show a negative result. Use adjective + enough + to + verb to show a positive result.
Examples:
“The coffee is too hot to drink.” (result: cannot drink)
“The coffee is cool enough to drink.” (result: can drink)
Examples in Sentences
- This suitcase is too heavy for me to carry.
- She is too young to watch that movie.
- There is too much sugar in this cake.
- He ate too many cookies and felt sick.
- We don’t have enough time to finish the project.
- This room isn’t big enough for all the guests.
- She speaks English well enough to get the job.
- Are you tall enough to reach the top shelf?
- The water is too cold for swimming.
- I have enough money to buy a new laptop.
- He runs too slowly to win the race.
- This dress is cheap enough for me to buy.
Common Mistakes
- ❌ Wrong: “This soup is enough hot.”
✅ Correct: “This soup is hot enough.” (Adjective before enough) - ❌ Wrong: “I have too money.”
✅ Correct: “I have too much money.” (Use ‘too much’ with uncountable nouns) - ❌ Wrong: “She is too young enough.”
✅ Correct: “She is too young.” or “She is young enough.” (Choose one meaning) - ❌ Wrong: “There are too much chairs.”
✅ Correct: “There are too many chairs.” (Use ‘too many’ with countable nouns) - ❌ Wrong: “He doesn’t enough sleep.”
✅ Correct: “He doesn’t get enough sleep.” (Enough before noun, with a verb)
Quick Summary
- Too = excessive (negative). Use before adjectives/adverbs: too hot, too fast.
- Too much + uncountable noun; too many + countable noun.
- Enough = sufficient (neutral/positive). Use after adjectives/adverbs: hot enough, fast enough.
- Enough goes before nouns: enough time, enough chairs.
- Use too + adjective + to + verb for negative results.
- Use adjective + enough + to + verb for positive results.
Practice Exercises
Fill in the blanks with too, too much, too many, enough, or the correct form.
- This coffee is ________ hot to drink right now.
- We don’t have ________ chairs for everyone.
- She ate ________ cookies and got a stomachache.
- Is this bag big ________ for all my books?
- There is ________ noise in this library. I can’t study.
Answers:
- too
- enough
- too many
- enough
- too much
Conclusion
Mastering too and enough is a small step that makes a big difference in your English. Remember: too = excessive (before adjectives/adverbs); enough = sufficient (after adjectives/adverbs, before nouns). Practice the examples and exercises above, and soon you’ll use them automatically. Keep learning, and don’t hesitate to revisit this guide whenever you need a quick review!
FAQ
1. Can I use “too” with a positive meaning?
No. Too always has a negative or excessive meaning. If you want to say something is very good, use very or really. For example: “This cake is very good” (not “too good”).
2. What is the difference between “too much” and “too many”?
Too much is used with uncountable nouns (e.g., water, time, money). Too many is used with countable plural nouns (e.g., books, people, chairs). Example: “I have too much homework” vs. “I have too many assignments.”
3. Can I use “enough” after a noun?
No. When enough modifies a noun, it always comes before the noun. For example: “We have enough food” (not “food enough”). But when it modifies an adjective or adverb, it comes after: “The food is hot enough.”
4. Is it possible to use “too” with a verb directly?
No. You cannot say “I too eat.” Too modifies adjectives, adverbs, or nouns (with much/many). For verbs, use too much or rephrase. Example: “I eat too much” (correct) or “I eat too quickly” (adverb).