Table of Contents
What can I say instead of more better?
What is another word for better?
superior | finer |
---|---|
grander | enhanced |
more desirable | more valuable |
more advanced | more enhanced |
more excelling | more exceptional |
When can you use more better?
“better” is a comparative form of “good”, so you do not need to (and should not) say “more better”: say either: It is better than your book. It is far better than your book. Just FYI, though, “more better” is pretty frequently used ironically these days by the hipsters and the whatnot to simply mean “better”.
Can you say more correct?
“More correct” is acceptable (especially in the adverbial form “More correctly”). That said, you will usually see “More accurate” instead.
Can can can can can sentence?
4. Can-can can-can can can can can can-can. For a fourth time, we have the same word with three different meanings: can-can, the dance; can, a verb meaning “able”; and can, a second verb meaning to put in the trash, or euphemistically to outperform.
What is the longest sentence you can make with one word?
“Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.” According to William Rappaport, a linguistics professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo (naturally), that — the word “Buffalo,” eight times in a row — is a legitimate, grammatically valid sentence.
Is even more better grammatically correct?
It’s nonstandard English, and will sound wrong – rather childish – to a native English speaker. “Even better” does the job in most cases. If you want to show an improvement from “even better”, you can use “even better yet” or “even better still”. “More” and “better” just don’t work well together.
What is the difference between more better and most better?
Most better. Incidentally, the proscription against a “double” comparative or superlative (more better; most better) ignores the earlier usage in English, in which “more” and “most” act as intensifiers, adding the emphasis that the question asks for.
Is it wrong to say ‘more better’ instead of ‘more’?
Using “more better” is against normal grammar, and if it is used it is uneducated and substandard. I agree; it is simply redundant. It’s like saying “more, more good” and you’d never (at least one can hope) say, “This book is more, more good than your book.”
Does ‘more and better’ qualify as a comparative comparative?
Students: We have free audio pronunciation exercises. More and better are both comparatives. It’s impossible – even in English with all its wild exceptions – to have a comparative like more qualify another comparative, better. I once read something about “more better” or something like that.
Do we need more better people?
No, we need more better people. The structure of this sentence is “we need more X” where X can be anything, such as roses or better people, so the above sentence is completely grammatical; it just does not mean the same as “we need better people”.