The usage of 'too much' is not correct to my knowledge. Rita is very much a lady. Rita is very much of a lady. Rita is too much of a lady. Rita is very much a lady.: Here we mean that it is quite true that Rita is a lady. The emphasis is on the truth part of the sentence rather than on Rita being a lady. Rita is very much of a lady.
The reason is less one of grammar and more one of the various different meanings of the verb "to do". Although we think of "do" as being a catch-all, usable-in-all-situations type of word, in fact it isn't: each meaning of the word is very precise and requires its own particular grammatical structure to be acceptable to an English speaker.
Grammar is important in communications, writing, academia, journalism, work, and many different areas of life for multiple reasons. Here are seven. 1. It Demonstrates Professionalism. Whether looking for a new job, marketing a product or service, or writing, how you speak and write impacts how people perceive you.
English Grammar for Dummies states: "Different than is never correct. What you want is different from. You can stop reading right here because now you have all the information you need." Plenty of non-dummies, including the author quoted above, have either said or written "different than." Are they completely wrong?
Think "different". Then it could be grammatically incorrect. Just not sure I can say this is "punctuationally" correct, but from a logo/branding/marketing point of view the use of punctuation may take something away from the impact of the message even if making the intention of the message unclear.
Aug 16, 2014 at 14:06. John, the short answer is no: helps cannot precede the verb in the kind of situations you're asking about (with the usual caveat that English is a bottomless sea of variation and nuance, so, for example, while your "better helps" and "better makes" are impermissible, "better matches" is perfectly fine.
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is much different grammatically correct