Mo2men wrote:
mikemcgarry wrote:
In this sentence, either could be correct.
More than have any of its competitors . . .
More than has any of its competitors . . .
These have different emphases, different implications, but neither is "wrong" from a grammatical perspective.
Does all this make sense?
Take care, my friend.
Mike :-)
More than have any of its competitors . . .
More than has any of its competitors . . .
These have different emphases, different implications, but neither is "wrong" from a grammatical perspective.
Does all this make sense?
Take care, my friend.
Mike :-)
Thanks Mike for your prompt response.
After sending my questions to you today, I searched for the topic in Google and it seems the topic is controversial in English
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