2.165 USAGE NOTE

If you want to say that something has more of a quality than something else which already has a lot it, you can use 'even' or 'still' before a comparative adjective, or 'still' after it.

Similarly, you can use 'even' or 'still' to say that something has less of a quality than something else which has little of this quality.

You can also use 'even' or 'still' when comparing the amount of a quality that something has at one time with the amount that it has at another.

In formal or literary English, 'yet' is sometimes used as a submodifier in the same way as 'still'.

2.166

You can indicate that something has an increasing or decreasing amount of a quality by repeating comparative adjectives. For example, you can say that something is getting 'bigger and bigger', 'more and more difficult', or 'less and less common'.

'Increasingly' can be used instead of 'more and more' and 'decreasingly' instead of 'less and less'.

2.167

If you want to say that something has a little more or a little less of a quality than something else, you can use 'rather', 'slightly', 'a bit', 'a little bit', or 'a little' with comparative adjectives.

You can also use these constructions to say that something has a little more or a little less of a quality than it had before.

2.168

If you want to say emphatically that something has no more of a quality than something else or than it had before, you can use 'no' in front of comparative adjectives.

'Any' is used for emphasis in front of comparatives in negative clauses, questions, and conditional clauses. For example, 'He wasn't any taller than Jane' means the same as 'He was no taller than Jane'.

Note that you can only use 'no' and 'any' like this when comparatives are being used as complements. You cannot use 'no' and 'any' with comparatives when they are being used in front of a noun group. For example, you cannot say 'It was a no better meal' or 'Is that an any faster train?'

2.169

When you use the comparative structure 'as ... as ...' (see paragraphs 2.129 to 2.135), submodifiers such as 'just', 'quite', 'nearly', and 'almost' can be used in front of it, modifying the comparison with their usual meanings.

'Nearly' can also be used as a submodifier when the 'as ... as ...' structure is preceded by 'not' with the meaning 'less......than'. You put it after the 'not'. For example, 'I am not nearly as tall as George' means the same as 'I am much less tall than George'.

2.170

When you use 'like' to describe someone or something by comparing them with someone or something else (see paragraphs 2.137 to 2.139), you can put several submodifiers in front of 'like', including 'just', 'exactly', 'very', 'quite', 'rather', 'somewhat', 'a little', and 'a bit'.

Here is a list of submodifiers used with 'like':

2.171

When you use 'the same as' and 'the same' to describe someone or something by saying they are identical to someone or something else, you can use a number of submodifiers in front of them, including 'just', 'exactly', 'much', 'nearly', 'virtually', and 'more or less'. These modify the meaning with their usual meanings.

2.172

When you are using superlative adjectives, you may wish to say that something has much more or much less of a quality than anything else of its kind. As with comparatives, you can do this by using submodifiers.

The submodifiers 'much', 'quite', 'easily', 'by far', and 'very' can be used with the superlative adjectives.

'Much', 'quite', and 'easily' are placed in front of 'the' and the superlative.

'By far' can be placed either in front of 'the' and the superlative or after the superlative.

2.173

'Very' can only be used with superlatives formed by adding '-est' or with irregular superlatives such as 'the best' and 'the worst'. 'Very' is placed between 'the' and the superlative.

'Very' can also be used to submodify superlative adjectives when you want to be very emphatic. It is placed after a determiner such as 'the' or 'that' and in front of a superlative adjective or one such as 'first' or 'last'.