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HMFindlay Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

happy, happier, happiest

0Anyone remember my tutor? He told me there's no such phrase as 'much more happier, much happier, more happier' or in other words he said it's gramatically incorrect.02br
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00Is it true? I see a lot of people use those phrases and I do notice that it doesnt fit to put much/more to a comparative such as happy but I see that that pattern of phrase is widely used around the globe.02br
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00Is he correct to say 'much more happier, much happier, more happier' is gramatically incorrect?0-
  

Top answer

0According to the rule most people know, he is right. )02br 02br 00This is the basic rule most people know:02br 00 - When there is one syllable in the word, the word is simply conjugated, most of the time by adding '-er'. 02br 00 - With more than one syllable int he word, the word is not conjugated by adding anything to it, but simply by putting 'more' before the word.

  • 0According to the rule most people know, he is right.
  • )02br 02br 00This is the basic rule most people know:02br 00 - When there is one syllable in the word, the word is simply conjugated, most of the time by adding '-er'.
  • 02br 00 - With more than one syllable int he word, the word is not conjugated by adding anything to it, but simply by putting 'more' before the word.
  • 02br 02br 00As happy knows more than one syllable, happier should not exist at all.
  • However, you are right that English people can say they are 'the happiest people in the world'.
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8 Answers
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0According to the rule most people know, he is right. However, there are some exceptions (of course...)02br
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00This is the basic rule most people know:02br
00 - When there is one syllable in the word, the word is simply conjugated, most of the time by adding '-er'. For example, small becomes smaller, great becomes greater, and so on.02br
00 - With
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0"More happier" is definitely not correct as a comparative, since it would mean "more more happy".02br
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00I don't see why "(much) happier" should be wrong, and it sounds to me much more natural than "more happy".0-
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0 what about much more happier? 0-
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0If "more happier" doesn't work, "much" isn't going to change anything, alas... 050010id6
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0The general rule is02br
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00when the adjective has 1syllable you can simply add -er....e.g. short - shorter02br
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00adjectives with 2 syllables that end in -y change the y to i and add -er......e.g. funny - funnier02br
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00other adjectives with 2 syllables or more than 2 use more .....e.g. more modern02br
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Vince you are right, but as for the first comment, more happier does not exist and is completely incorrect. you can either say more happy, or happier, but more happier is wrong.
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The usual way to compare a two-syllable adjective ending in –y, like happy is to change the y to I and add –er.

If we use "more happy" instead of "happier," it means the same thing.

We might use "more happy" in a situation in which the word "happy" has already been mentioned, or is definitely known, as in these examples from the New York Times:

"¢ What you think y

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