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Park sang joon Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Much of something

1.[having much of properties of something]
I am not much of moviegoer.
I wasn't too much of a wild child.
I don't think that was much of a compliment.
I didn't find this to be much of a problem.
I don't think much of the new project.
The two plans are much of a sort.

2.[a lot of something]
There was not much of a breeze.
= There was not a lot of breeze

I have come across the structure 'much of ~' a lot until now, and I have interpreted the structure like #1, #2.
Do I interpret the structure correctly?

Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

park sang joon Do I interpret the structure correctly? Yes. '

  • park sang joon Do I interpret the structure correctly?
  • Yes.
  • '
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4 Answers
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park sang joonDo I interpret the structure correctly?
Yes. The only one that rings false with me is 'I wasn't too much of a wild child.'
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Thank you for your answer.
You revived my dying thread.
The only one that rings false with me is 'I wasn't too much of a wild child.'
I think there are so many wrong sentences on the internet.
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park sang joonYou revived my dying thread.
I wish you would stop making such comments. Your thread was started only a couple of hours before my response. We are not paid to respond to you and we all have our own schedules of private, real life. Please begin to show a little patience for the free help you are receiving.
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Please begin to show a little patience for the free help you are receiving.
If you are mad at with me, I'm so sorry.
I always appreciate any answer and reply to the answers to express my gratitude, and even though I don' have any visitor, I attribute that to my poor English.
If you dislike that expression, I will never use that from now on.

But, If you had not

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