She wasn't too pleased with his behavior.
Mike went to the party and two more of us went too, but left early because it was too noisy. Another time we might leave it up to Mike whether he goes without us.
this one that you could use : there are too many people in this house Yeah, I had this question, too. Hey! There's the answer! I bet you would have gotten it, too. There it is again! (On a more serious tone, you can replace "too" with "as well" in most cases and it'll still make sense.)
Too means also, or excessively.
Examples:
"He bought a sandwich, and some donuts, too."
"I ate too much." "Maria put too much milk into the cake mix."
The cake was too sweet.
I like pie too.
We, too, went to the club last night.
I am tired too.
Here are some sentences.
You are too lazy to believe.
This is too easy if you just think about it.
too = also "I want to go, too."
you are too young to have that thing
Example: Marlon has the propensity to drink too much.
What a fine specimen for my lab!
When The Boy Played His Guitar, It Made Too Much Clatter.
The heaviness of the truck tire was too much for me to pick up. The heaviness of the comment was too much to bear.
I am American too.
The carpenter would like to eat, too.
My belt is too loose, I have to tighten it.
Her ego is far too big.
The viscosity of the liquid was too high, anything could float over it. It is the sentence using the word viscosity.
I abserved that she was not alone too short, but too young also.
you are too young to have that thing
sorry, but I cant. I'm looking for the same thing, too!
I find it too hard to remember whether to use "to" or "too" in a sentence.
The word 'too' is used like also. i.e. I need to have a break too
I have some pressing news. The girl is pressing my shirt right now. I was pressing too hard.
The significance of technology is way too important. This is a sentence using significance word in it.