Adjective It is evident he hides true facts from US,
Adverb
He evidently hides true facts from us.
EXERCISE 1
(a) Rewrite the following sentences so as to remove the Adverb 'too';
(1) He is too proud to admit his fault.
(2) This trunk is too heavy for me to lift,
(3) The teacher is too weak to control the class,
(4) This news is too good to be true,
(5) It is never too late to mend,
(6) He is too young to travel alone,
(7) His voice is too rough to attract hearers,
(8) He is too simple-minded to be a successful agent,
(9) He was too late to hear the opening remarks of the President,
(10) The case is too urgent to be postponed,
(11) You are too late for the train,
(12) He is not too eager for praise,
(13) Your speech was too good for words.
(14) Sunder Singh was too God-fearing to leave the fallen man to his fate
(15) There are too many boys in the class for one teacher to control,
(b) Rewrite the following sentences using the Adverb 'too',
(1) He is so short that he cannot be a soldier.
Answers
Answer:
In order for a sentence to be grammatically correct, the subject and verb must both be singular or plural. In other words, the subject and verb must agree with one another in their tense.
Answer:
He is so proud that he cannot admit his fault
This trunk is so heavy for me that it cannot lifted
The teacher is so weak that cannot control the class
This news is so good that it cannot be true
It is never so late that it cannot mend
He is so young that he cannot travel alone
His voice is so simple-minded that he cannot be a successful agent
He was so late that he cannot hear the opening remarks of the president
The case is so urgent that it cannot be postponed
You are so late that you cannot late for the train
He is not so eager that he cannot praised
Your speech was so good that it cannot be explained
Sunder Singh was so God-fearing that he cannot leave the fallen man to his fate
There are so many boys that teacher cannot control them
Explanation:
He is too short to be a soldier