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- Simpler or More Simple - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
It is simpler to use simpler when you want to express that one thing is simpler than something else Simpler is a word that is in use for this very purpose, so don't waste your breath, ink or electricity with more simple
- simpler? more simple? - WordReference Forums
Hi, I would like to know which of these phrases is correct: "simpler" or "more simple"? I can not find the answere anywhere Thank you
- simpler,simplest vs more simple,most simple - WordReference Forums
Hello all ! which sentence is the right one ? I think he made the problem more simple,and she made it the most simple I think he made the problem simpler,and she made it the simplest Thanks in advance ! Ahmad
- etymology - Conundrum: cleverer or more clever, simpler or more . . .
Counting Google hits is a notoriously bad estimate for how common something is; Google Ngrams shows simpler is fifteen times more common than more simple Putting the whole sentence in doesn't make much difference
- More simple vs simpler more fun, funner - WordReference Forums
Can someone explain whether it is correct to use either the comparative form “simpler” or “more simple”? Microsoft Word marks “more simple” as a grammatical
- Much more simple or much more simpler [closed]
Which is the correct sentence? It is much more simple to resolve the memory leak issues It is much more simpler to resolve the memory leak issues
- phrase requests - Alternatives to simpler is better? - English . . .
I am seeking alternatives for simpler is better, not ways to describe extreme sparseness and simplicity Also, the contrast inherent in simpler is better, which is essential to my question, is absent in the less-is-more question
- simpler or more simple? - WordReference Forums
marcopd, Definitely "simpler" is to be preferred The phrase "more simple" sounds studied, affected and slightly - précieux From a purely etymological point of view "more simple" is almost a contradiction in terms: sim - ple (from Latin sine - without plexus - a twining, convolution) Hence something simple is something which is "not complex" and so using the adverb "more" is quite
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