sula54
Junior Member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2005
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Chinese
- Home Country
- Taiwan
- Current Location
- Taiwan
Dear Teachers,
Although I know many people use both of them and “I like ~~ the most” is more popular than “I like ~~ most” (search result from google: 1070 links for “I like * most” without “the” and 15000 links for “I like * the most”), I still feel strange about the usage of “the” in this sentence, because “most” here should be an adverb to describe “like” and how can “the” ever be put in front of an adverb?
The question has been confusing me for a long time, so I will be glad if someone can explain it to me clearly.
In addition, is it true the native speakers tend to use "the best" in this pattern when the object is a person? For example "I like my mother the best." is more preferable to "I like my mother the most."?
With regards,
Sula54
Although I know many people use both of them and “I like ~~ the most” is more popular than “I like ~~ most” (search result from google: 1070 links for “I like * most” without “the” and 15000 links for “I like * the most”), I still feel strange about the usage of “the” in this sentence, because “most” here should be an adverb to describe “like” and how can “the” ever be put in front of an adverb?
The question has been confusing me for a long time, so I will be glad if someone can explain it to me clearly.
In addition, is it true the native speakers tend to use "the best" in this pattern when the object is a person? For example "I like my mother the best." is more preferable to "I like my mother the most."?
With regards,
Sula54
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