[color=red]1-You committed a misdemeanor. It is enough to lose your licence.[color=indigo]
2-You committed a misdemeanor. It is enough for you to lose your licence.
[color=red]3-You committed a misdemeanor. That is enough to lose your licence.
[color=indigo]4-You committed a misdemeanor. That is enough for you to lose your licence.
Meaning: That is enough to make you lose your licence.
Thank you very much Beeesneees for all your replies.
One more question here:
[color=darkred]a-You committed a misdemeanor. It is good enough to lose your licence.
[color=darkblue]b-He committed a misdemeanor. It is good enough to take away his licence.
[color=indigo]c-He committed a misdemeanor. It is good enough for his superiors to take away his licence.
I don’t think “a” makes much sense, unless the “you” in question wants to lose their licence.
The second and third ones seem fine to me. (It is good enough a reason/an excuse to take away his licence.)
I would not use ‘good’ with the negative sentence in your example:
a - It is bad enough to lose your licence.
b - It is bad enough for his licence to be taken away.
c - It is bad enough for his superiors to take away his licence.