0 a larger or extra number or amount:
Would you like some more food?
More people live in the capital than in the whole of the rest of the country.
She couldn't be more beautiful.
You couldn't be more wrong.
He finds physics far/much more difficult than other science subjects.
Play that last section more passionately.
More than 20,000 demonstrators crowded into the square.
It gets more and more difficult to understand what is going on.
The more he insisted he was innocent, the less they seemed to believe him.
1 a larger or extra number or amount (of); comparative ofmany or much:
Men tend to be more aggressive than women.
They still need a great deal more money to finish the project.
Do you think Australia is a more democratic country than Britain?
You should eat more food that contains a lot of fibre, such as fruit, vegetables and bread.
We use the quantifier more to talk about additional quantities, amounts and degree. More is a comparative word.
2 More with nouns, adjectives, adverbs, verbs, prepositions
We use more with different classes of words. We use more after verbs but before every other word class:
More or less means ‘mostly’, ‘nearly’ or ‘approximately’. We use it in mid position (between the subject and main verb, or after the modal verb or first auxiliary verb, or after be as a main verb). It is slightly informal:
中文繁体
更大(的), 更多(的), (用以構成形容詞和副詞的比較級)更…
More中文简体
更大(的), 更多(的), (用以构成形容词和副词的比较级)更…
MoreEspañol
más…
MorePortuguês
mais…
More日本語
余分の, もっと多くの, もっと~…
MoreTürk dili
daha, daha da, daha çok…
MoreFrançais
plus/davantage (de), davantage/plus, plus…
MoreCatalan
més…
More