Is it correct to say more better?
When using the comparative or superlative form of an adjective, you should only use one kind of comparative or superlative. Because the comparative form of good is better, you can’t say “more better.”
What does the more better mean?
the more (people come to my party), the better: a greater number (of people coming to my party) will make it (a) better (party)
Is much more better correct?
You were correct to say “much more better” is not correct. It is simply “much better.” I hope you feel much more gooder now that you have assurance from natives?
Can I say way more better?
It is not incorrect to say that something is way better or that you have way more of something, but it is not formal. It has also been in adverbial use for long enough that 80 year olds should accept it.
Why is it wrong to say more better?
“More” implies a higher level of “good.” Therefore, “more better” would imply a level that is better than better. “More better” is never correct. If you want to say that something is better than good, you say it is “better,” but if you want to say it is more than better, you say that it is “best.”
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”.
Is more better good English?
“More better” is never correct. If you want to say that something is better than good, you say it is “better,” but if you want to say it is more than better, you say that it is “best.”
How do you use the more the more?
The more the input, the better the conversation. The better the sleep, the more rested the mind. The is used in the comparative phrasing of each part, particularly with the more, the greater, the better, the lesser, the fewer, the harder.
Can you say so much more better?
It’s not “correct” in standard English, but it is fairly common slang to say “more better” (or, quite often, “mo’ better”). “Much, much better” and “far better” are “correct” formal alternatives, with “way better” being only slightly informal.
What can I say instead of way more?
What is another word for way more?
greater | farther |
---|---|
larger | bigger |
deeper | higher |
superior | aggrandized |
amassed | wider |
How do you use way more?
- WAY more than enough. Independent.
- They go way more than I do. Independent.
- Way more than he draws from us”. The New York Times – Sports.
- “Way more than any other city”. The New York Times.
- It’s way more than that. The Guardian – Film.
- For me, that’s way more than enough. The Guardian – Film.
- I wish you way more than luck”.
Is more healthier grammatically correct?
The convention in English is for words with two or fewer syllables to receive the suffix -er as in “healthier.” While the expression “more healthy” is acceptable, “more healthier” is not because the term “healthier” is already modified and does not require the adverb “more.”