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Anonymous Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

"the more the marrier" form

Hi all,
I try to turn a sentence as the "the more the marrier", however I can't find the correct form. Could you tell me if the following sentences are correct in englih:

1) the more links there are, the better it is for the problem.
2) the more the function has a high value, the stronger will be the link.

Thanks a lot

Freddy
  

Top answer

It's ' the more the merrier ', Freddy. 1) the more links there are, the better it is for the problem . -- Fine 2) the higher the value (that) the function has , the stronger will be the link .

  • It's ' the more the merrier ', Freddy.
  • 1) the more links there are, the better it is for the problem .
  • -- Fine 2) the higher the value (that) the function has , the stronger will be the link .
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2 Answers
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It's 'the more the merrier', Freddy.

1) the more links there are, the better it is for the problem. -- Fine
2) the higher the value (that) the function has, the stronger will be the link.
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Pardon me, would "the stronger the link will be" be a more natural way of saying that?

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