0
Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Do they mean the same thing?

She is now dangerous like she never was.
She is now dangerous than she was before.
  

Top answer

Anonymous Do they mean the same thing? Neither is very effective. The grammar is not good.

  • Anonymous Do they mean the same thing?
  • Neither is very effective.
  • The grammar is not good.
  • You need a "more ...
  • than" construction.
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.

3 Answers
0
Anonymous Do they mean the same thing?
Neither is very effective. The grammar is not good. You need a "more ... than" construction.

She is now more dangerous than she [ever was / was before / ever was before / used to be].

CJ
0
Does

"She is now more dangerous like she never was before."

sound okay?
0
AnonymousDoes"She is now more dangerous like she never was before."sound okay?
No. She is now more dangerous than she ever was before.

"like" is not used is these kinds of comparisons.

If you are showing equality, use "as ... as": She is as dangerous as she was before.
If you are showing inequality, use "more

Related Questions