0
Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

The more S+V, the more S+V

ex1) The more she thought about it, the more depressed she became
ex2) The more you have, the more you want

The more Subject + Verb, the more Subject + Verb

Sometimes I find the structure " the more S+V, the more V+S" like ex1).
I don't know in which case I use such structure.
Is it the same as the more S+V, the more S+V?
I mean, can I write like this?
ex3) The more she though about it, the more she became depressed.

Please check whether the following sentence I've made right or not.
ex4) The more time goes by, the more get she weight.

Thank you in advance for your teaching.
  

Top answer

In (1), "depressed" is a adjective not a verb. (3) is also OK (apart from the typo). I can't think of any case where "the more V+S" would be possible.

  • In (1), "depressed" is a adjective not a verb.
  • (3) is also OK (apart from the typo).
  • I can't think of any case where "the more V+S" would be possible.
  • (4) is ungrammatical.
  • "The more time goes by, the more she gains weight" is possible.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
In (1), "depressed" is a adjective not a verb. (3) is also OK (apart from the typo). I can't think of any case where "the more V+S" would be possible.

(4) is ungrammatical. "The more time goes by, the more she gains weight" is possible.
0
I could clearly know it thanks to you. Thank you so much for your teaching, GPY Emotion: embarrassed

Related Questions