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No, but many people use such colloquially. Neater is a comparative adjective (positive-neat,comparative-neater, superlative-neatest). Comparatives and superlatives are not generally modified, other than where necessary by an article (the neatest). Comparatives are typically preceded by a verb and followed by the conjunction than.

That is a technical treatment, the wordy form. The short answer is just no. It is redundant to try to modify a comparative adjective. It's sort of like trying to say, "There is more more water in the Pacific Ocean than any other."

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11y ago
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Q: Is the expression much neater correct English?
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