
healthier or more healthy? - WordReference Forums
Mar 8, 2012 · Dear friends, Can you help me please? How can I say correctly: 'Fresh fruit and vegetables are MORE HEALTHY or HEALTHIER than fast food.' I'm confused how to form …
eating healthier/more healthily - WordReference Forums
Dec 21, 2007 · Hi, I think "eating more healthily" is more correct grammatically than "eating healthier" in the following, yet the original uses the latter instead. Could you come up with a …
Eat more healthily or eat healthier - WordReference Forums
Feb 15, 2021 · Healthier is usually considered a comparative adjective, not an adverb. So eat more healthily sounds much better (to me).
EN: more healthy / healthier - WordReference Forums
Mar 4, 2009 · Actually, both forms - 'more healthy' and 'healthier' - are possible. (So you weren't wrong, only slightly too restrictive ) You might like to look at the thread in the English Only …
a new you - WordReference Forums
Dec 23, 2013 · Hi everyone, I am proofreading some material that will be used in a "get healthier" website and I wanted to hopefully get all of your input regarding the following sentence: "You …
more healthy / healthier - WordReference Forums
Apr 5, 2010 · Hola, compañeros: Hablando de comida, creéis que las dos opciones son aceptables en el siguiente caso, o una es mejor que otra. Al final he escrito más de dos …
as a whole vs. in its entirety - WordReference Forums
Oct 10, 2021 · 1. The population in its entirety is getting healthier. 2. The population as a whole is getting healthier. Any difference between the two sentences? Thank you.
more remote - remoter / most remote - remotest
Jan 23, 2020 · Hello, I would like to ask why the comparative and superlative of "remote" appears in many dictionaries as "remoter" and "remotest" instead of "more remote" and "most remote". …
easier or more easy? - WordReference Forums
Jun 2, 2009 · In everyday speech and in writing you would generally hear easier, healthier, friendlier. One exception I can think of where I would say more easy rather than easier:
If the weather will be/is nice it'll be more pleasant!
Feb 8, 2025 · Example: If you exercise regularly, you will feel healthier. The second conditional is used for unlikely or hypothetical scenarios. Example: If I won a million dollars, I would travel …