0
Unsunghero Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Many more or much more

would like to know which one is correct:

many more or much more

thanks in advance
  

Top answer

Depending on what you quantify, both are correct. 1. Use many and few for countable nouns.

  • Depending on what you quantify, both are correct.
  • 1.
  • Use many and few for countable nouns.
  • I have many/few friends.
  • There are many more opportunities waiting for you.
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.

12 Answers
0
Depending on what you quantify, both are correct.

1. Use many and few for countable nouns.

I have many/few friends.
There are many more opportunities waiting for you.


2. Use much and little for uncountable nouns.

She has much/little money in the bank.
There is much more pollution in the city.


3. Use "a lot of" and "lots of" for
0
There are many more people who live in China than people who live in Hawaii.
There is much more milk in this glass than in that cup.

Both are correct.
0
hey ...can i say ...

travel by bus is much more cheaper....
0
Anonymoushey ...can i say ...
travel by bus is much more cheaper..
No. The ending -er on cheap already means more, so you can't have both more and -er. (And don't forget to capitalize the first word of every sentence.)


Travel by bus is much cheaper.

0
but what about:

there are some disadvantages, such as dirt, impure air and many more?

is many more ok or is much more better?
0
AnonymousThere are some disadvantages, such as dirt, impure air, and many more?
As shown. many disadvantages, not much disadvantages.

CJ
0
i improved job knowledge much more ..is it corect?
0
AnonymousI improved my job knowledge much more.
Correct as shown, but "to improve one's job knowledge" is somewhat unidiomatic.

One possibility is I learned much more about my job.

CJ
0
"Much" and "More" are different Degrees of Comparison (Much-More-Most). How can they be used together in a sentence? Can someone please explain its correctness not in colloquial terms, but rather syntactically?
0
Anonymous"Much" and "More" are different Degrees of Comparison (Much-More-Most). How can they be used together in a sentence? Can someone please explain its correctness not in colloquial terms, but rather syntactically?
Countable. many chairs (a lot of chairs), more chairs, a few chairs, a few more chairs, many more chairs (a lot more chairs)
Uncountable.

Related Questions