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Hi, everyone Is it wrong to omit the verb in the second part of these sentences? “People were more interested in national news than they WERE IN local news” “They will be more interested in your product than they WILL IN mine” Thank you
2021年1月23日 23:59
解答 · 5
You can leave out 'they were in' and 'they will in' and it will mean the same.
2021年1月24日
Hi Fernando, you can say: They are more interested in (the first thing) than (the second thing). Example: The like apples more than oranges. It’s just as accepted as saying: They like apples more than they like oranges.
2021年1月24日
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