> Greater than / > More than

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Lady Liz

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Hi!

For the mathematical symbol >, should we use the phrase "greater than" or "more than"?

E.g.: This container has more/greater water than that one.


Thanks!
 
It would make no sense to say "greater water".
 
The mathematical symbol means 'is greater than', with reference to numerical values.

We don't use it in a sentence about two containers of water.
 
You can write "Amount of water in Cup A > Amount of water in Cup B". But you'd need an appropriate context to write that.
There is more water in A than B, but '>' doesn't mean "more than". The amounts can be greater or lesser, but the water can't be.
 
You can write "Amount of water in Cup A > Amount of water in Cup B". But you'd need an appropriate context to write that.
There is more water in A than B, but '>' doesn't mean "more than". The amounts can be greater or lesser, but the water can't be.
E.g.: "There is greater quantity of water in container A than in container B." >> Is this right?
 
There is a​ greater quantity of water in A than [in] B.
 
... '>' doesn't mean "more than"...
:up: Strictly. But with our lives increasingly dominated by computers and smartphones, and the growing usage of keyboard-based abbreviations, more and more people are behaving as if it were. :-( ;-)
b
 
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