Quite\Rather 2

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Tdol

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What's the rule? ;-)
 

RonBee

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One is used. The other is not.

:wink:
 

RonBee

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You could say:

  • The film was quite a bit better than I'd expected.

:)
 

Tdol

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That's cheating. ;-)
 

Red5

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RonBee said:
One is used. The other is not.

:wink:

:lol: :lol: :lol:
 

Red5

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Re: rather

valtango said:
or simply, the film was better than I expected..

Very true, and in my opinion, preferable. ;-)
 

ion Joe

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Can I say quite good or rather bad?
 

RonBee

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ion Joe said:
Can I say quite good or rather bad?

Yes, you can use either, although preferably not at the same time.

:wink:
 

Ashok K Thapa

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quite better? rather better? Why not just say better than..... I am confused!!
 

meylenlau

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Good, better and best , these are 3 degrees of the irregular adjective.

If we want to express the second degree of it ,so we use ‘better’ alone rather than ‘quite better’.But for the first degree “good’ ,”quite good’ is commonly used.
 

rhapsomatrics

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Be advised that this is a public poll: other users can see the choice(s) you selected.
Poll Options
The film was ___ better than I'd expected.
quite



I think that one's choice of word is sometimes affected by one's mood.This is why,I think,RATHER is used when expressing somthing in the negative or something unpleasant...that was rather callous of you...that was rather bad of her...that was a rather unpleasant statement you just uttered.
However,IMO,QUITE is used to express not too unpleasant notions...that was quite brave of you...I am quite delighted...I quite agree with you on that...
Other examples...He came quite early...(positive)...He came rather too late(negative)I'm quite happy...not I'm rather happy...
Also,I think,RATHER can be used with adverbs of degree...too,very etc but I don't think QUITE can."He is quite too happy to talk"...I don't think it's right...He is quite happy...he is too happy to talk...he is much too happy to talk...he is rather too sad to talk....
 

aggelos

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rather

I think the 'negative' sense of rather has been overstressed. Rather is not always negative. It can often be used in comparisons, ie to indicate that some quality exists to a higher degree than its opposite quality. In this sense, "the film was rather better than I thought" is a typical example of this use. It could be phrased differently, without a real change in meaning, like this: "the film had more good elements than bad ones, although I didn't expect it would".

Look also at these finds from a Google search:

THE INDEPENDENT

Mr Hague is doing rather better than his party (link)
-----------------
Geoff Hoon (Lord Privy Seal, House of Commons)

It might be rather better if, for a change, the Liberal Democrats lived in the real world and listened to the police, instead of commenting on leaked documents (link)
-----------------
ECONOMIC & SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL

...social science is now rather better focused on some of the most difficult medium to long-term issues facing the UK... (link)
-----------------
'Yes. Rather better than twelve years ago.' 'Rather better?' said Mr Meagles, 'you mean rather worse...' (link)
-----------------

By the way, a Google search produced these results:
-quite better: 53400
-rather better: 215000
 
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rhapsomatrics

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I think I agree with you that the word RATHER does not always depict negativity,however,I honestly do not think that quoting from the house of commoms is particularly authoritative.
 

Dr. Jamshid Ibrahim

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Rather can be used with:
1. Negative adjectives: The soup is rather cold.
2. Positive adjectives to express surprise. Here rather changes its meaning to very: it was rather clean: more than clean and more than I expected.
 

quantumphyser

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No need to discuss more.I think Tdol should show the official solution.
 

Ferrus

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Would it be worth considering the difference in register between the two?
 
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