[Grammar] more than and rather than

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kite

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Dear teachers
I always get in trouble with using these two words "more than and rather than" in sentences. As far as I am concerned about those two words, "more than" is used with positive meaning and "rather than" is uses with negative meanings. If I I say "USA has the best education system rather/more than other countries do", which one should I use?

Thanks.
 
Dear teachers
I always get in trouble with using these two words "more than and rather than" in sentences. As far as I am concerned about those two words, "more than" is used with positive meaning and "rather than" is uses with negative meanings. If I I say "USA has the best education system rather/more than other countries do", which one should I use?

Thanks.

After "best", neither of them work.
 
Dear teachers
I always get in trouble with using these two words "more than and rather than" in sentences. As far as I am concerned about those two words, "more than" is used with positive meaning and "rather than" is uses with negative meanings. If I I say "USA has the best education system rather/more than other countries do", which one should I use?

Thanks.

Both phrases deal with preferences, but in different ways.

I will buy a house rather than rent an apartment.
I like owning a house more than renting an apartment.

George chose to play the flute rather then the tuba.
George likes the flute more than the tuba.
 
(Or maybe George loves the tuba but has a bad back! :-D)
 
Polka bands and the guy who wants to dot the i in Ohio? (I understand playing the tuba enables you to play the Sousaphone.)
 
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