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The phrase "much more worth" is grammatically correct and is commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to compare two things or concepts in terms of their value or importance. Example: "Although both books are informative, the second one is much more worth your time."
Exact(17)
Literature makes life much more worth living.
The menu is a-jumble with much more worth exploring.
Not the sort of writer who is profiled in Vanity Fair perhaps, but so much more worth reading about.
"The fact that I've had to overcome so many things makes what you've achieved so much more worth it," Ms. Cha said.
"He was murdered for his catalogue and they knew that, and they knew Michael was much more, worth so much more dead than alive.
"I look at them as assets and our job in retail is to make them much more worth the trip," he said.
Similar(40)
When they tell him how much less they are worth compared with three years ago, he reminds them how much more they are worth now compared with 10 years ago.
Their judgment has been naturally clouded by their love for their house, how much money they put into it and how much more it was worth a year ago.
Michel Faber, writing in The Guardian, said of the book: "John is Cynthia's attempt to prove how much more she was worth.
It's always better to own less of something worth much more than own more of something worth much less.
You have to convince the public that this is really worth doing – That a new hip is worth much more than preventing a heart attack, or preventing amputation.
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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