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Sayaka Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

No more adj. than / no adj.+er than

Hello. I'm sayaka.

I'm confused about the meaning difference between "no more adj. than" and "no adj.."
I tried to find the answer here, but I couldn't. So I ask you a question.

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Is there a difference between the two sentences below. Please give me an answer.
#1: This mountain is no more high than Mt. A. ( Mt. A is 200 meters. Everyone thinks it is not high. )
#2: This mountain is no higher than Mt. A.

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My understanding NOW is this.

#1 means:
Mt. A is not high (BUT NOT LOW*), and this mountain is not high (BUT NOT LOW), either."
* At least, you do NOT say "Mt. A is low" because it is not very important now. 

#2 means:
This mountain is as low as Mt. A. So, Mt. A is low, and also this mountain is low.

And NEITHER #1 NOR #2 means "This mountain is the same height as Mt. A."

Is that right?
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Thank you.
sayaka
March 24, 2009
  

Top answer

sayaka Is there a difference between the two sentences below. Please give me an answer. #1: This mountain is no more high than Mt.

  • sayaka Is there a difference between the two sentences below.
  • Please give me an answer.
  • #1: This mountain is no more high than Mt.
  • A.
  • ( Mt.
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4 Answers
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sayakaIs there a difference between the two sentences below. Please give me an answer.
#1: This mountain is no more high than Mt. A. ( Mt. A is 200 meters. Everyone thinks it is not high. )
#2: This mountain is no higher than Mt. A.
Sayaka:
#1 is not grammatically correct.
#2 is grammatically correct. It means that the mountain might be t
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Thank you for replying.

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I have found an explanation for "no more adj. than" and "no adj.."
Originally, the explanation and example sentences are written in Japanese (so, I translate). Like the below.

There is a big difference of the meanings between "no more ... than" and "no adj.."
"A no more ... than B" is used when
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The rule you state is exactly the same rule. = "no + (comparative form of the adjective) + than"
The reason is how we make the comparative of adjectives. Adjectives with one syllable (and sometimes 2) add -er.
tall -> taller
big -> bigger
high -> higher
pretty -> prettier
lovely -> lovelier

Adjectives with 3 or more syllables (sometimes 2) do no
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Thank you for always answering my question.

I've understood. Thank you very much.

sayaka
April 1st 2009

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