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Cheche Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

"more of" or "much of"



I would like your help with the following question.

She is _B______a musician than her brother.

A much of B more of C more as

The right answer is B, but I want to know why not choose A.
  

Top answer

e. you need a comparative adjective here, and it's more . You can also say, for example, she's much more of a musician than her brother.

  • e.
  • you need a comparative adjective here, and it's more .
  • You can also say, for example, she's much more of a musician than her brother.
  • Much intensifies "more" here.
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2 Answers
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I guess because she is compared with her brother, i.e. you need a comparative adjective here, and it's more. You can also say, for example, she's much more of a musician than her brother. Much intensifies "more" here.
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Yes, it's "more of ... than ..."

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