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When more is used before adjective or adverb as inconvenient in your example, it is an adverb whose primary function is to modify the following word

However, when it is used before a noun (or sometimes after a noun), it is used as a determiner or adjective. The more, the more you can see all of this in a dictionary example The more (one thing happens), the more (another thing happens) an increase in one thing (an action, occurrence, etc.) causes or correlates to an increase in another thing [1] the more work you do now, the more free time you'll [you will] have this weekend. What's more is an expression that's used when you want to emphasize that the next action or fact is more or as important as the one mentioned What's more, it brings more chaos

If possible always pay the balance in full every month or pay more than the minimum amount What part of speech is ‘more’and which word it is modifying? The modifies the adverb more and they together form an adverbial modifier that modifies the verb doubt According to wiktionary, the etymology is as follows From middle english, from old english þȳ (“by that, after that, whereby”), originally the instrumental case of the demonstratives sē (masculine) and þæt (neuter). What's the difference between these types of adjective usages

This is more of a prerequisite than a necessary quality

This is more a prerequisite than a necessary quality In case (a) you are asking which of the boxes has more desirable qualities than the other This is question you would most likely ask to a person to get their opinion In case (b) you are asking which of the boxes would be more likely asking a statistics question, how many people would prefer box 1 and how many would prefer. 0 i got confused with “ stricter and more strict”, strictest and most strict” What is the rule about this or both are correct

Let me make a sentence with stricter dan is stricter than ryan about productivity Trump is more strict than obama about illegal immigration. 1 more likely than not logically means with a probability greater than 50% A probability of 50% would be as likely as not But the user of the phrase is not making a mathematically precise estimate of probability. You can say more smooth, or smoother

Both are fine and mean exactly the same thing

But beware of trying to combine them, and saying more smoother Many will say that a formulation like that is wrong.

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