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Discover LudwigThe phrase "almost so much" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express a degree of something that is nearly equivalent to a significant amount, often in a comparative context.
Example: "I enjoyed the movie almost so much that I would watch it again immediately."
Alternatives: "nearly as much" or "close to that amount".
Exact(1)
"But in Bill's case he wears it so proudly, almost so much so that it is kind of a conceptual move in and of itself".
Similar(59)
The book is all mind, and an observant, taut, astringent mind it is, though there is something almost unhinged about so much rationality in the face of such duress.
But they are almost never so much about Noël Coward-like turns of phrase as simply capturing "indelible character moments," says Tom Rothman, a chairman of the Fox movie operation, who has also introduced regular showings of classic films on the Fox Movie Channel.
Yes, I know that racial revisionism has become so common in film that it's almost customary, so much so that moviegoers rarely balk or even blink.
Even the nasty baddies are almost identical, so much so that having witnessed them Josh Hartnett's werewolf gunslinger (it's that kind of programme) had to ask whether they were the same bunch.
The pattern has become almost familiar, so much so that Dr. Khan's death was called unsurprising by many moderate Muslims, who complain that the government has become powerless in the face of the extremists.
He almost put so much room between himself and the field at the Memorial that it looked as if they were going to have to rent a Gulfstream V to catch him.
The soundtrack is at Krakatoa levels and the editing is frenzied, almost stroboscopic, so much so that you can't really get a clear look at what the Transformers actually look like.
But why are these stretches almost uniformly ugly, so much so that most of us have conditioned ourselves not to notice?
My mom and I were living in Victoria, British Columbia, when there was a massive snowfall a record-breaking 150 cm (almost five feet)—so much, in fact, that most people were either stuck or had to dig their way out.
My mom and I were living in Victoria, British Columbia, when there was a massive snowfall a record-breaking 150 centimeters (almost five feet)—so much, in fact, that most people were either stuck or had to dig their way out.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com