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- More than 10 years of experience or over 10 years of experience
8 Would you please suggest the best translation between the following: More than 10 years of experience as Senior Technical Architect Over 10 years of experience as Senior Technical Architect The sentence is in the description of the skills of a Technical profile
- bigger vs. more big - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
As we know, comparatives compare two things So, for example, we say that one thing is larger or more temperate than another thing Now, let us consider the following examples A The African elep
- grammar - more preferred versus preferable - English Language . . .
In case (a) you are asking which of the boxes has more desirable qualities than the other This is question you would most likely ask to a person to get their opinion Preferred is a verb In case (b) you are asking which of the boxes would be more likely asking a statistics question, how many people would prefer box 1 and how many would prefer
- Better, more better or much better, which is correct?
In "More better", "more" is redundant because both "better and more" means increase, intensity in comparison However, it is okay with "more and more; less and less", and "adj +er and adj +er" to express increase in comparion
- Use of more with noun - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Do " More + adjective " and " More of + noun" have the same meaning? Could you give other examples in the structure " More of + noun?" I usually just say "more + adjecti ve" He attacked with such pace and I believe he was more of a danger than Pele at the time - he was a phenomenon, capable of sheer magic Could = softener, more of a suggestion
- Use of “-er” or the word “more” to make comparative forms
Sure enough, this ngram shows that stupider got started long after more stupid Apparently, the need to compare levels of stupidity was so great that people granted stupid a sort of honorary Anglo-Saxon status in order to use the more-convenient comparative -er And once stupider is in, by analogy vapider eventually starts sounding more acceptable
- difference between twice as . . . as and twice more than
Do both of the following sentences have the same meaning? 1- My salary is twice higher than yours 2- My salary is twice as high as yours
- I would have liked [to have seen to see] John . . .
Some people might think OP's original text using the Perfect Infinitive (to have seen) is more "logical" because it more explicitly echoes the past tense element of would have liked
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