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The phrase 'the more amusing' is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is often used to compare two things and express that one is more entertaining or funny than the other. It can be used in both formal and informal writing. Example: The more amusing story won the award for best comedy at the film festival.
Exact(51)
And it was one of the more amusing awards shows because of it.
The more seriously they take their world, the more amusing we find it.
He knows that it's a hilarious sight, and it's all the more amusing because he doesn't push it.
All the more amusing, you might think, that it struck a chord with a 46-year-old member of parliament.
But one truism of civil defense is that the greater the danger, the more amusing the plan seems in retrospect.
Please watch this video, which has some of the more amusing hockey commentary you will ever hear.
Similar(9)
Toward the end of the debate, more amusing questions arose.
He later retracted the statement, and most Cairo intellectuals I spoke with found the "confession" more amusing than edifying.
Mr. Baryshnikov, in a telephone interview, said he found the experience more amusing than upsetting.
In one of the film's more amusing segments, the drummers are reunited with Lottie (the Body) Claiborne, an exotic dancer they used to back at Detroit's Twenty Grand club.
Perhaps the only thing more amusing than the picture of a Passover festival in Coney Island in 1978 (right) would have been a picture of Barton Silverman, then a 35-year-old sports photographer, at the front of that roller-coasting car.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com