0
Ravinath Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Much better or More better ?

I always get confused with more , much , much more better phrases

Could you please explain this using some examples if possible

Thank you Emotion: smile
  

Top answer

"much better" is correct, meaning "a lot better" or "a great deal better". For example: "I feel much better now" or "I am much better at English than I am at mathematics". "more better" and "much more better" are incorrect.

  • "much better" is correct, meaning "a lot better" or "a great deal better".
  • For example: "I feel much better now" or "I am much better at English than I am at mathematics".
  • "more better" and "much more better" are incorrect.
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.

4 Answers
0
"much better" is correct, meaning "a lot better" or "a great deal better". For example: "I feel much better now" or "I am much better at English than I am at mathematics".

"more better" and "much more better" are incorrect.
0
I feel much better now Emotion: smile Thank you
0
I meant to also say that "more" (in the sense relevant here) is used to create comparatives, such as "more difficult" or "more beautiful". "better" is itself already a comparative; this is why "more better" is incorrect (same as "more easier" or "more prettier", for example).

Related Questions