I'm quite not able to decide the type of comparisons used in the following sentences. What I really want to know is if these are comparison of adjectives or adverbs or something else. Here they are.
1. He is as good a pianist as you are a drummer.
2. He's a better pianist than you are a drummer.
3. He's as good a swimmer as he's a footballer.
4. He's a better swimmer than he's a footballer.
5. if all that was left of you was your smile and your little finger, you'd still be more of a man than anyone I've ever met.
And, could I use sentences like these...?
6. He's more a footballer than a swimmer.
Someone please help me out.
Regards
- Prateesh
What type of comparisons are these
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- sueandcat
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Re: What type of comparisons are these
Hi Prateesh,
I think what's being compared in your examples are the nouns (pianist, drummer etc), rather than adjectives or adverbs. 'Good' and 'better' are adjectives/comparative adjectives. In sentences 3 and 4, you can't use the contraction 'he's' - you must say '... as he is footballer'. You could indeed use sentence 6!
Hope this helps, Sue.
I think what's being compared in your examples are the nouns (pianist, drummer etc), rather than adjectives or adverbs. 'Good' and 'better' are adjectives/comparative adjectives. In sentences 3 and 4, you can't use the contraction 'he's' - you must say '... as he is footballer'. You could indeed use sentence 6!
Hope this helps, Sue.
http://www.theenglishgrammarblog.com
Teacher of English for 10 years. CELTA and DTLLS qualified. Linguistics and Anthropology graduate.
Teacher of English for 10 years. CELTA and DTLLS qualified. Linguistics and Anthropology graduate.