<p>Something I have never seen on the SAT but have wondered about for a long time..</p>
<p>"(Noun) is just as, if not more than, (adjective) ____ (other noun)"</p>
<p>What goes in the blank?</p>
<p>Something I have never seen on the SAT but have wondered about for a long time..</p>
<p>"(Noun) is just as, if not more than, (adjective) ____ (other noun)"</p>
<p>What goes in the blank?</p>
<p>Pie is just as, if not more than, tasty as poo.</p>
<p>Sorry, the ‘then’ was meant to go after the comma.</p>
<p>No, there’s not supposed to be a “than” in my example at all. God I’m tired.</p>
<p>Wouldn’t it just be:</p>
<p>Pie is just as, if not more, tasty as poo?</p>
<p>Pie is just as tasty as, if not tastier than, poo.</p>
<p>Think of the sentence as having two routes.</p>
<p>Route 1: Pie is just as tasty as poo.
Route 2: Pie is tastier than poo</p>
<p>EDIT: Wait… but my answer doesn’t match the sentence structure that you provided me, so… ?</p>