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2 times longer Student A studies for 3 hours every day. Student B studies for 6 hours every day. How do you express the comparison using 'than'? I'd say "Student B studies 2 times longer than Student A." What do you think? |
Re: 2 times longer I'd say "Student B studies twice as long as Student A". Or "Student B studies twice as much as Student A". |
Re: 2 times longer Yeah, so would I but my student wanted to know how to express that using 'than'. anyway it turned out to be a trap :p because as soon as I said it she said 'Doesn't that mean Student B studies 9 hours?' I also tried to use '3 hours more than Student A' after the fact but she wouldn't let my first attempt go. So I thought I'd ask some others. |
Re: 2 times longer All of them are used. Some examples from Google :
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Re: 2 times longer I'd say twice as long \ much. I've always avoided saying 'two times' - it may be a British \ American thing but I'm not sure. |
Re: 2 times longer I wondered that too - but a lot of the examples I found on Google were from UK websites. |
Re: 2 times longer So, do you think "Student B studies 2 times longer than Student A." means student B studies 6 hours or 9 hours? I'd say 6 but if I had to nail down the grammar mathematically I can't argue that it's not 9... other than I think it means 6. |
Re: 2 times longer Not being mathematically minded it probably took me two times longer than anyone else to work out how it could possibly mean 9 :) I finally got there - but I think anyone using it spontaneously would mean 6. |
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