These are from Cambridge Grammar of English Language
The degree adverbs very and too modify adjectives and adverbs, but not nouns and verbs.
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With nouns and verbs the closest counterparts to the constructions in [15i–ii] contain
the determinative much: (very) much and too much.
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Under restricted conditions, adjectives and adverbs can also take much as degree modifier.....
Why is 'much' used here with the adjective 'same' instead of 'very' or 'too'?
Several commercial DBMS products provide mandatory controls at the B1 level. They also typically provide discretionary controls at the C2 level. Terminology: DBMSs that support mandatory controls are sometimes called multi-level secure systems [17.15, 17.18. 17.23] (see the subsection "Multi-level Security" immediately following). The term trusted system is also used with much the same meaning.
"much the same" is a set phrase that we use without being very conscious of its grammatical explanation.
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"much the same" is a set phrase that we use without being very conscious of its grammatical explanation.
Tara2Why is 'much' used here with the adjective 'same' instead of 'very' or 'too'?
This goes in the category of "much the" with an adjective or adverb in the comparative or superlative degree.
That was much the worst film I've seen this year.
Of the three, he seemed much the least robotic candidate.
For much