Ali
Should I use "better than" or "more than"? I like chocolate better than vanilla by far. I hate vanilla. I like chocolate more than vanilla by far. I hate vanilla.
Jul 16, 2018 8:48 PM
Answers · 8
2
I think both are grammatically correct, but I hear "more than" much more often. "Better than" sounds weird with "like".
July 16, 2018
1
I think - more than-
July 16, 2018
1
The word "better" is the comparative form of the word "good". The word "more" is the comparative form of the word "most". You could say that chocolate is good. I like it better than vanilla. Hope this helps
July 16, 2018
Both are fine.
July 17, 2018
Thank you. I need to use the phrase "by far" as well. Could you give me an example sentence with "by far"?
July 16, 2018
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