Affichage des articles dont le libellé est than. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est than. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 21 octobre 2014

Top Tips Grammar: Comparison - Uses

Main points

*Comparative adjectives are used to compare people or thing.
*Superlative adjectives are used to say that one person or thing has more of a quality than others in a group or others of that kind.
*Comparative adverbs are used in the same way as adjectives.

 

a) You use comparative adjectives to compare one person or thing with another, or with the same person or thing at another time. After a comparative adjective, you often use ‘than’.

- She was much older than me.
- I am happier than I have ever been.



b) You use a superlative to say that one person or thing has more of a quality than others in a group or others of that kind.

- Tokyo is Japan’s largest city.
- He was the tallest person there.

 

c) You can use comparative and superlative adjectives in front of a noun.

- I was a better writer than he was.
- He had more important things to do.
- It was the quickest route from Rome to Naples.

You can also use comparative and superlative adjectives after link verbs.

- My brother is younger than me.
- He feels more content now.
- The sergeant was the tallest.
- This book was the most interesting.

 

d) You can use adverbs of degree in front of comparative adjectives.

a bit a great/good deal a lot rather
far a little much slightly

- This car’s a bit more expensive.
- Now I feel a great deal more confident.
-It’s a rather more complicated story than that.

You can also use adverbs of degree such as ‘by far’, ‘easily’, ‘much’, or ‘quite’ in front of ‘the’ and superlative adjectives.

- It was by far the worst hospital I had ever seen.
- She was easily the most intelligent person in the class.

Note that you can put ‘very’ between ‘the’ and superlative adjective ending in ‘-est’.

- It was of the very highest quality.

 

e) When you want to say that one situation depends on another, you can use ‘the’ and a comparative followed by ‘the’ and another comparative.

- The smaller it is, the cheaper it is to post.
- The larger the organisation is, the greater the problem of administration becomes.

When you want to say that something increases or decreases, you can use two comparatives linked by ‘and’.

- It’s getting harder and harder to find a job.
- Cars are becoming more and more expensive.

 

f) After a superlative adjective, you can use a prepositional phrase to specify the group you are talking about.

- Henry was the biggest of them.
- These cakes are probably the best in the world.             
- He was the most dangerous man in the country.

 

g) You use the same structures in comparisons using adverbs as those given for adjectives:

*‘than’ after comparative adverbs

- Prices have been rising faster than incomes.

*‘the’ and a comparative adverb followed by ‘the’ and another comparative adverb.

- The quicker we finish, the sooner we will go home.

*two comparative adverbs linked by ‘and’.

- He sounded worse and worse.
- He drove faster and faster till we told him to stop.

 

 

 

 

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Top Tips Abz Ingles: Part A    -    Part B
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See also:

Words related to Failure to Cooperate Irregular Verbs list
Common Phrasal Verbs Common Slangs
Common misspellings Regular vs Irregular Verbs
Common Errors Frequently confused words
Common Slangs Lista de Términos Gramaticales
Common Clichés Common Prepositions

 

No te olvides de compartir esto con tus amigos y compañeros, hagamos de este Blog una comunidad de difusión del Inglés como segundo idioma. Antes de irte deja tu comentario y haz clic en Me Gusta.

Top Tips Grammar: Other ways of comparing

Main points

*This includes words like: ‘as... as’, ‘the same (as)’ and ‘like’.
*You use ‘as... as...’ to compare people or things.
*You can also compare people or things by using ‘the same (as)’.
*You can also compare people or things by using a link verb and a phrase beginning with ‘like’.

 

a) You use ‘as... as...’ to compare people or things that are similar in some way. You use ‘as’ and an adjective or adverb, followed by ‘as’ and a noun group, an adverbial, or a clause.

- You’re as bad as your sister.
- The airport was as crowded as ever.
- I am as good as she is.
- Let us examine it as carefully as we can.

 

b) You can make a negative comparison using ‘not as... as...’ or ‘not so... as...’

- The food wasn’t as good as yesterday.
- They are not as clever as they appear to be.
- He is not so old as I thought.

 

c) You can use the adverbs ‘almost’, ‘just’, ‘nearly’, or ‘quite’ in front of ‘as... as...’

- He was almost as fast as his brother.
- Mary was just as pale as before.
- She was nearly as tall as he was.

In a negative comparison, you can use ‘not nearly’ or ‘not quite’ before ‘as... as...’

- This is not nearly as complicated as it sounds.
- The hotel was not quite as good as they expected.

 

d) When you want to say that one thing is very similar to something else, you can use ‘the same as’ followed by a noun group, an adverbial, or a clause.

- Your bag is the same as mine.
- I said the same as always.
- She looked the same as she did yesterday.

If people or things are very similar or identical, you can also say that they are ‘the same’.

- Teenage fashions are the same all over the world.
- The initial stage of learning English is the same for many students.

You can use some adverbs in front of ‘the same as’ or ‘the same’..

almost just much rougly
exactly more or less nearly virtually

- He did exactly the same as John did.
- You two look almost the same.

You can use ‘the same’ in front of a noun group, with or without ‘as’ after the noun group.

- They reached almost the same height.
- It was painted the same colour as the wall.

 

e) You can also compare people or things by using a link verb such as ‘be’, ‘feel’, ‘look’, or ‘seem’, and a phrase beginning with ‘like’.

- It was like a dream.
- He still feels like a child.
- He looked like an actor.
- The houses seemed like mansions.

You can use some adverbs in front of ‘like’.

a bit just more rather
a little least most somewhat
exactly less quite very

- He looks just like a baby.
- Of all his children, she was the one most like me.

 

f) If the noun group after ‘as’ or ‘like’ in any of these structures is a pronoun, you use an object pronoun or possessive pronoun.

- Jane was a clever as him.
- His car is the same as mine.

 

g) You can also use ‘less’ and ‘least’ to make comparison with the opposite meaning to ‘more’ and ‘most’.

- They were less fortunate than us.
- He was the least skilled of the workers.
- We see him less frequently than we used to.

 

 

 

 

---------------------------------------------
Top Tips Abz Ingles: Part A    -    Part B
---------------------------------------------

 

See also:

Words related to Failure to Cooperate Irregular Verbs list
Common Phrasal Verbs Common Slangs
Common misspellings Regular vs Irregular Verbs
Common Errors Frequently confused words
Common Slangs Lista de Términos Gramaticales
Common Clichés Common Prepositions

 

No te olvides de compartir esto con tus amigos y compañeros, hagamos de este Blog una comunidad de difusión del Inglés como segundo idioma. Antes de irte deja tu comentario y haz clic en Me Gusta.