Alexandre
I prefer … than / to … “Which one do you prefer?” I prefer tea to coffee. I prefer tea than coffee. “Which one does he prefer?” He prefers walking to driving. He prefers walking than driving. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Which preposition is correct in the cases above: to or than? Thank you.
Jan 27, 2011 10:43 AM
Answers · 8
11
"To" is correct. We use "than" with other comparative words like "rather" or "better"; for example: He prefers driving to taking the bus. He would rather drive than take the bus. He likes driving better than taking the bus.
January 27, 2011
2
You cannot use "than" with "prefer"! It is wrong! I prefer A to B. This is the correct way.
January 27, 2011
1. I prefer tea to coffee. 2. I prefer to make my own food than buy it from a restaurant. These are the examples of how to use prefer to and prefer than. Hope it helps :)
May 21, 2021
prefer sth. to sth. prefer to do sth. rather than do sth.
January 27, 2011
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