- Simpler or More Simple - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
It is simpler to use simpler when you want to express that one thing is simpler than something else Simpler is a word that is in use for this very purpose, so don't waste your breath, ink or electricity with more simple
- simpler,simplest vs more simple,most simple - WordReference Forums
Hello all ! which sentence is the right one ? I think he made the problem more simple,and she made it the most simple I think he made the problem simpler,and she made it the simplest Thanks in advance ! Ahmad
- simpler? more simple? - WordReference Forums
I would then always go with 'simpler' over 'more simple' and 'happier' over 'more happy' I'm not sure if 'more simple' is strictly incorrect, but I have a feeling my mindset comes from English professors constantly emphasizing concision and clarity =)
- Much more simple or much more simpler [closed]
Which is the correct sentence? It is much more simple to resolve the memory leak issues It is much more simpler to resolve the memory leak issues
- single word requests - Analogue of simpler for more complex . . .
The word "simpler" means "more simple", as in "This new product is simpler than the old product" But I cannot think of a similar word for "more complex": Su
- etymology - Conundrum: cleverer or more clever, simpler or more . . .
Counting Google hits is a notoriously bad estimate for how common something is; Google Ngrams shows simpler is fifteen times more common than more simple Putting the whole sentence in doesn't make much difference
- More simple vs simpler more fun, funner - WordReference Forums
Can someone explain whether it is correct to use either the comparative form “simpler” or “more simple”? Microsoft Word marks “more simple” as a grammatical
- Much more easy versus much easier - English Language Usage Stack . . .
It's the words of two syllables where we get into trouble: more useful, more decent, more careful, more tender, more helpful but easier, happier, sillier, narrower, simpler Generally, if a two-syllable word ends in i or o (e g, easy, happy, silly, narrow), then it gets the morphological -er and -est Otherwise it's more and most
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