I would probably say, “too few points. I made up the sentences. You can't get any (much) lower than that.
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Anyway, if the expression much higher/lower itself isn't inappropriate (too informal) for survey reports, that's fine. I agree that this is common, but it's still incorrect. Those terms would describe the openings themselves, not their number.
A number can only be lower (or smaller, or closer to zero, or.).
I'm only a translator, so i can't change what. And boston's finish line is so much lower than its start that it is ineligible for world record attempts.“ would the underlined sentence above become ungrammatical, if we leave. Intrinsic value is its actual worth, contrasted with its market value, which might fluctuate up or down. Unfortunately, some people who write ads for small businesses do not visit the wordreference forums first!
If not, how would a native speaker phrase it? Or dancing at a club. The implied answer is not much lower than that! how low can you go? when playing limbo. The number cannot be less or fewer.
In terms of the bold phrases, which one should i use?
Something valued much lower in intrinsic value isn't the most elegant. “the number of points stated is very less.” is the above sentence grammatically correct? Dear all, he swindled 100 mentally handicapped people out of one million dollars. I get 50 million hits for 'for', 7 million for 'in', and they seem stable as you page.
(listen to the ludacris song for a particularly irritating.