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Anonymous Posted 20 years ago
Vocabulary

a sentence with "more...than..."

Please help with this sentence I made:

It is more convenient for Jim to handle this matter than David.

I wonder if I should use "for" before "David" i.e. "It is more convenient for Jim to handle this matter than for David"

Tks a lot.
  

Top answer

Hi, Yes, 'for' is better. But . .

  • Hi, Yes, 'for' is better.
  • But .
  • .
  • we often omit it in speech.
  • Best wishes, Clive
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1 Answers
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Hi,

Yes, 'for' is better. But . . . we often omit it in speech.

Best wishes, Clive

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