In a phrase like "many of her paintings" you can't remove "of" and have "many her paintings"; the latter is not grammatical, while "many paintings" loses the link with "her". "Many of" (where …
6. I have much more money. The OP's sentence is grammatically correct. You use "much more" in front of an uncountable noun. Another example: I need much more time to do this …
First off, as little as possible is the only option that I have ever read or used. I believe the other example you listed is grammatically correct, but it really isn't used. Second, your example …
Sep 15, 2018 at 13:39. 1. Yes, they are correct. Money, perhaps ironically, is an uncountable noun. In that sense it is grammatically like rice or flour or time and used with a singular verb …
This implies that Mrs Dursley' sister and her husband were intentionally being as unDursleyish as they could. as UnDursleyish as it was possible. This sounds very odd as a …
更多内容请点击:phrase usage - "as little as possible" vs. "as least as possible"