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
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
phrase requests - Alternatives to simpler is better? - English . . . I am seeking alternatives for simpler is better, not ways to describe extreme sparseness and simplicity Also, the contrast inherent in simpler is better, which is essential to my question, is absent in the less-is-more question
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
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
meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange This is the sense in which my teenagers would use this term ” So let me resubmit the question on “meta” in simpler format When your teenager boy says “It’s (or this is) meta,” what does it mean? In what situation and of what sort of object they use this phrase? I’m sorry for many users who lent me kind answers to my previous