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The phrase "much less beautiful" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to compare two things, with the first being less impressive or desirable than the second. You can use it to express a sense of contrast or disappointment. Example: "The first draft of my essay was riddled with errors and much less beautiful than the final version."
Exact(4)
It is also much less beautiful.
She had certainly never been pretty, much less beautiful.
In many cases, a more accurate or realistic interpretation would probably render much less beautiful hands!
How much less beautiful will the earth be without all the golden flax and countless pumpkins whose existence we deny with every seed we crunch between our teeth?
Similar(55)
Once you've had a chance to spend four months on the Riviera and get paid for it, you sort of forget the words to "There's No Place Like Home" or "Hooray For Hollywood," much less "America The Beautiful".
Too Beautiful for You -- (1989) -- Bertrand Blier's deceptively comic story of a married man cheating with a middle-aged secretary much less attractive than his beautiful wife.
Alternatively, the Jaffa beaches south of the old town promontory are just as beautiful but much less busy.
But that means nothing to someone who is deciding whether to drop $200 on a device that can be personalized in the extreme, or spend much more on an unlocked Nokia that's beautiful but much less versatile.
It's freezing and gray right now, but Berlin is a beautiful city and so much less stressful than New York.
"Beautiful," however, came as much less of a surprise.
She also befriends the not by any means less beautiful Jem Carstairs a much calmer and sweeter contrast to the arrogant brooding Will.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com