0
Cat fold 525 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

As much money as

I learned from a book that an experienced player can make ten times as much money sitting at a table with nine mediocre players who are tired and have a lot of chips compared with sitting at a table with nine really good players who are focused and don't have that many chips in front of them.

Hi, there. The sentence above is about poker games. Can I change it into the sentence as follows?

I learned from a book that an experienced player can make ten times as much money sitting at a table with nine mediocre players who are tired and have a lot of chips as sitting at a table with nine really good players who are focused and don't have that many chips in front of them.
  

Top answer

The first sentence doesn't sound right at all. The second sentence is correct but hard to follow because the second "as" is so far away from the first one. Changing both instances of "as" to "as by" greatly clarifies the structure: I learned from a book that an experienced player can make ten times as much money by sitting at a table with nine mediocre players who are tired and have a lot of chips as by sitting at a table with nine really good players who are focused and don't have that many chips in front of them.

  • The first sentence doesn't sound right at all.
  • The second sentence is correct but hard to follow because the second "as" is so far away from the first one.
  • Changing both instances of "as" to "as by" greatly clarifies the structure: I learned from a book that an experienced player can make ten times as much money by sitting at a table with nine mediocre players who are tired and have a lot of chips as by sitting at a table with nine really good players who are focused and don't have that many chips in front of them.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0

The first sentence doesn't sound right at all.

The second sentence is correct but hard to follow because the second "as" is so far away from the first one. Changing both instances of "as" to "as by" greatly clarifies the structure:

I learned from a book that an experienced player can make ten times as much money by sitting at a table wit

Related Questions