What appealed more to me about him...

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Rita Gil

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Is the following phrase written in correct English:
"What appealed more to me about him is the fact that his actions don't contradict his words."
 

emsr2d2

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Re: Right or wrong?

More than what?
 

GoesStation

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Re: Right or wrong?

Provided there's an antecedent for more (such as a previous sentence discussing his appealing features), it's correct.

Any time you write the fact that in a sentence, you should replace it with that​ and see whether the meaning changes. (Hint: it won't.)
 

Rita Gil

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Re: Right or wrong?

Thank you for both your answers.
What about this sentence:
"What appeals most to me about him is the fact that his actions don't contradict his words."
I've tried to change the word "more".
 

GoesStation

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Re: Right or wrong?

That's probably better. (We'd need more context to know for sure.)

You should try writing that instead of the fact that.​ Does the change affect the meaning of your sentence?
 

Rover_KE

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Rita, I have changed your thread title.

Extract from the Posting Guidelines:

'Thread titles should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.'
 

Tdol

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Re: Right or wrong?

That's probably better. (We'd need more context to know for sure.)

I actually think that works without more context.
 
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