the more gets a man wants more the he reordering
Answers
Answer:
The more a man gets, the more he wants. Explanation: This is the correct Reordering of this sentence
Answer:
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Explanation:
More is an adjective in The more we get, the more we want. Why? (Grab a beverage . . .)
What you have here is a comparative correlative construction. It is characterized by a pair of clauses each using the plus a comparative adverb or comparative adjective to form a phrase that functions as either adverb or an adjective.
In order to determine what your comparative is, you need to figure out what it is modifying. That can can be tricky with comparative correlatives, because we often omit words—even entire verbs—in these constructions (cf. The sooner, the better).
In your sentence, more modifies an elliptical noun (let's say stuff—more stuff), so it's an adjective†.
Let's look at some other examples for, um, clarity . . .
The harder the work, the more they complain.
Here, harder is an adjective—a predicate adjective and subject complement for work. The linking verb is elided—is is missing! the harder the work is → the work is the harder → the work is hard → hard work. More is an adverb modifying the verb complain. the more they complain → they complain the more → they complain more.
The harder they work, the more we pay them.
Here, harder is an adverb modifying the verb work. the harder they work → they work the harder → they work hard. More is an adjective modifying the elliptical noun money. the more we pay → the more money we pay → more money.