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  1. Feb 6, 2016 · Then and than have two different grammatical functions:. Then (/ðen/) is an adverb and it is used to express a temporal relationship between two or more events (with the meaning of "next" or "after"), a cause - effect condition (as a synonymous of "as a result"), or to add some more details to a sentence (with the meaning of "in addition" or "moreover") :

  2. According to the Cambridge Dictionary, the expression "better you than me" has this definition: said by someone who does not want to do the thing that someone else is doing. This is a mainly US expression: the UK equivalent is "rather your than me". This fits with the first definition that you quote, but not the second.

  3. Jul 30, 2021 · The fourth interpretation is different. The versions above all take “better” as comparing the number: “this amount is better than that amount”. But there’s another possibility… The comparison “better” refers to the cakes themselves. The quality of one particular cake is good, but there are four cakes that have better quality. In ...

  4. Dec 22, 2014 · 2 The other teams played better than us. My remark: The variant 2 is often avoided by repeating the verb to be/to do as substitute of a normal verb: 3 He is taller than I am. 4 He speaks English better than I do.

  5. Oct 25, 2021 · Here, better is the adverb, understand is the verb, and the concept is the direct object. You can place the adverb before or after the verb-object phrase (e.g. "better understand the concept" or "understand the concept better"), but not within it (e.g. "understand better the concept").

  6. She is more beautiful than I. She is more beautiful than I am. I am better adapted to the environment than you. I am better adapted to the environment than you are. Which sentences are correct? I think sentence cannot end with an object in such cases. For example, "She is better than me". It should be I and not me according to grammar rule.

  7. Oct 23, 2014 · @Leo Than can be a preposition "You dance better than me" or a conjunction "You dance better than I do". (We need to replace you, as FumbleFingers points out, with a word with separate nominative and accusative forms for this question to be useful. I chose I/me.) –

  8. "Better than" is a proposition that is followed by an object. The pronouns used as objects are me, you, him, her, us, and them. Compare to "he is taller than me", "I am smarter than him", "they are like us". The object can also be a clause, which is a mini-sentence that has a subject of its own, like "I run faster than I walk".

  9. 3. "Better sooner than later" is already an abbreviation of the full phrase, so it's more common to use it in an abbreviated sentence where the context is already known: I told him better sooner than later. Otherwise if you have to explain the context, it's more natural to include more detail: I told him, if you're going to send that letter ...

  10. Aug 23, 2018 · Let us use the example below to test the correctness or the wrongness of ' than she verses than her; "Wilbert is shorter than (she/her)." With sentences like the above, we need to consider the fact that we are comparing two grammatical items of equal or the same grammatical units; consider the comparison below; the sentence ' Wilbert is shorter than (she/her) is the same as;