It depends what your definition of "stronger" is, but if you define stronger to mean containing more caffeine, then the answer is no.
Green tea, and all tea, contains less caffeine than a typical cup of coffee. This is true even of the "tippy" teas, teas made of leaf buds, which tend to be highest in caffeine among teas. The only exception would be if you brewed the tea extremely strongly, using a huge amount of leaf and steeping it for a long time--although this would probably make the tea so bitter and astringent that it would be unpleasant to drink.
Green tea is generally considered to be healthier than coffee. People are less tempted to add in sugar or milk to tea. Green tea will also have less calories, fat, sodium, and caffeine than coffee does.
I like both I like tea the best. I like coffee way more than tea except when coffee is without sugar because it would taste very bitter if it's just natural. Tea is healthier for you than coffee though.
Tea
Some coffee alternatives are: green tea coke (or other caffeinated drinks) black tea
it can be considered coffee than tea
It should be, "you prefer coffee to tea".
caffeine
A cup of coffee tends to have much more caffeine than a cup of tea. Tea (including black tea, green tea, white tea, oolong tea, etc.) tends to have about 15-70mg of caffeine per 8 oz. cup, whereas the same size cup of coffee tends to have about 80-135mg of caffeine. You cannot generalize about one type of tea (black, green, etc.) containing more or less caffeine. However, by dry weight, tea actually contains substantially more caffeine than coffee. This fact can be misleading, since when brewing coffee, one uses more coffee grounds by weight than one uses tea. Tea is very light, and typically, only 2-3 grams of loose tea leaf are steeped to produce an 8 oz. cup of tea. The brewing method for tea (and to some degree for coffee) can have a large effect on the caffeine content. For tea, using more leaf, and steeping for longer times, can result in a much higher caffeine content in the finished cup.
In its essence, coffee is a kind of tea, brewed with cherry seeds from the coffea arabica or coffea robusta plant instead of leaves of the camellia sinensis (tea) plant, and for the most part, in the processing stages for both coffee beans and tea leaves, both are dried and fermented to a certain degree, and with the exception of green tea (the exception is hōjicha, a roasted green tea) and white tea, coffee beans and many varieties of tea are roasted.
green tea doesn't have caffeine. and also it doesn't stain your teeth. which is usually good.
The correct way to tell people about your love of java is to say that "I prefer coffee to tea."
Well tea has less caffeine than coffee so you will be less jittery unless you put a lot of sugar in your tea