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"too sunny" is correct and usable in written English as an adjective phrase modifying a noun.
It expresses the intensity or degree of the quality of being sunny. It can be used in both formal and informal contexts. Here is an example: "The weather forecast warned of temperatures reaching up to 90 degrees and it was too sunny to go on a hike without proper sun protection."
Exact(50)
"I liked that it wasn't too sunny," Mr. Armisen said.
The flat roads around Montauk were "too sunny".
We canceled our trip to the ruins -- too sunny.
He wanted the aquarium in the living room, but it was too sunny.
Still, some readers have found his tale of Enlightenment sexual progress entirely too sunny.
Dappled sunlight filters through the sycamore and oak trees, so it's sunny but not too sunny.
Similar(10)
I'm about to leave this very hot and sunny country for a rainy and possibly not-too-sunny London.
Since then, people of color have had to be mindful of walking in too-nice of a neighborhood, browsing in too-swank of a store or simply taking a drive on a too-sunny day lest we have to suddenly prove civil rights which are supposed to be inalienable.
"The nights not too hot, sunny days when you could just row," she recalled.
Its colours too: its sunny white concrete, the hopeful minty green of its steel window frames, the outbursts of red and rich blue in its glazed bricks.
In a way, Robinson in Space was a continuation of London – here again was Scofield's sly, bemused and creamy delivery; here, too, the sunny views of anonymous infrastructure and off-screen in the margins the slightly sordid Robinson.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com