only too
English
editAdverb
editonly too (not comparable)
- (before adjective) very, all too.
- I'll be only too happy to help.
- 1922, Stephen McKenna, The Confessions of a Well-Meaning Woman[1]:
- In a crisis I am only too well aware that I am always left to find a way out, but that night I felt hardly adequate even to ordinary conversation
- 1913, Kenneth Grahame, chapter 10, in The Wind in the Willows:
- After some miles of country lanes he reached the high road, and as he turned into it and glanced along its white length, he saw approaching him a speck that turned into a dot and then into a blob, and then into something very familiar; and a double note of warning, only too well known, fell on his delighted ear.
- (before adverb) to a high degree; very well or very much
- 2019 November 21, Samanth Subramanian, “How our home delivery habit reshaped the world”, in The Guardian[2]:
- Cities were not built to handle this volume of last-mile activity – a fact that firms such as UPS realise only too well.
- 2014, Trina Chako, Sisters[3]:
- You understand?”
“Only too well.” Sudhir said wryly.
Collocations
editOften used in combination with "well", where this expression normally collocates with adjectives and verbs connected to understanding and knowledge:
- know only too well
- understand only too well
- be only too aware
- comprehend only too well
- remember only too well