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Akdom Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Not...anymore than

"Government and the unions aren't telling GM what to build anymore than they've done so in the past. "

not...anymore than

I 'm not that confidence when it comes to using this sentence form, especially when complicated with tenses.

Could you walk me through it a little?

Could I say:

1. I don't think she is teaching me anymore than I've already learned in the past.

2. I think she is not teaching me anymore than what I've learned in the past.

3. If they pulled a stunt like this on me, I wouldn’t like it anymore than the next guy did(does)
  

Top answer

The spelling is wrong. It is two words: ' any more' . The single word 'anymore' has a different meaning.

  • The spelling is wrong.
  • It is two words: ' any more' .
  • The single word 'anymore' has a different meaning.
  • These are OK: 1.
  • I don't think she is teaching me any more than I've already learned in the past.
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1 Answers
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The spelling is wrong. It is two words: ' any more'. The single word 'anymore' has a different meaning.

These are OK:

1. I don't think she is teaching me any more than I've already learned in the past.
2. I don't think she is teaching me any more than what I've learned in the past.
3. If they pulled a stunt like this on me, I wouldn't like i

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