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The phrase "a much more impressive" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to compare and contrast two things, where the second thing is considered to be significantly better or more impressive than the first thing. Example: The second draft of the report was a much more impressive piece of work compared to the first draft.
Exact(41)
It is intended for two, and it may be the most impressively succulent slab of beef on the menu, certainly a much more impressive affair than the cut called Scottish tender, which is neither tender nor Scottish.
China scores a much more impressive 55%.
He also has a much more impressive public record.
Bill Richardson is vastly more accomplished with a much more impressive and deep resume.
Lozano-Hemmer admits that Australia is getting a much more impressive version.
By the early 1960s he was back in London, this time with a much more impressive CV.
Similar(19)
Easy road conditions will make a car look much more impressive than tough situations.
Millions of simple discrete operations carried out at lightning speed one after another adding two numbers, comparing two others, fetching a third from memory—is responsible for the modern computing age, an achievement that much more impressive considering the world is not digital.
But Donghoon Shin's Kafka's Dream, a Panufnik Composers Scheme commission, inspired by a Borges poem, was much more impressive.
Of course it is a shocking display of mass psychology, but honestly, as a spectacle, it was much more impressive than the many Olympic Opening Ceremonies I have covered, and it made the Super Bowl halftime show look like amateur hour.
A five-hour finish, after all, is much more impressive for a 70-year-old than for a 30-year-old.
More suggestions(15)
a much more spectacular
a much more striking
a much more dramatic
a much more considerable
a much more wonderful
a much more stunning
a much more appealing
a much more elegant
a much more agreeable
a much more problematic
a much more vivid
a much more lucrative
a much more expansive
a much more precarious
a much more forceful
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com