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#104374 - 06/17/02 10:03 AM
Re: Also, in response to a couple posts down....
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Member
Registered: 01/30/00
Posts: 367
Loc: Indianapolis, IN, USA
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Just a quick correction . . .
I've noticed that people repeatedly use the word, "then," when they really mean, "than".
THEN is a temporal word concerning a moment in time.
THAN is a comparative word and is used when comparing one thing to another.
EXAMPLES I heard a knock, THEN the door opened. (temporal concerning time)
My dog is bigger THAN your dog. (Used after a comparative adjective or adverb to introduce the second element or clause of an unequal comparison. Can also be used to introduce the second element after certain words indicating difference such as, "He draws quite differently than she does".
OK, you're right, I'm a bit nuts but I'm a professional writer, so what I rather be right THAN wrong because THEN I'd be in real trouble.
Steve
_________________________
Some see, some don't, some will, some won't
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