it can be considered coffee than tea
Totally matter of preference. I prefer coffee over tea.
with
tee is an american word for a top and tea is something like coffee that you drink :)
No, it is not a verb. Tea is a noun, a drink, or an occasion to drink it.
No
I prefer coffee to tea. 'to' is the correct preposition.
It should be, "you prefer coffee to tea".
The correct way to tell people about your love of java is to say that "I prefer coffee to tea."
I think it is: I prefer coffee OVER tea. But it also could be: I prefer coffee to tea.It could also be more than tea but i think it is I prefer coffee to tea. I would always use to.
They prefer tea cups as tea is served very hot and a tea cup is thinner than a coffee mug so the tea will cool quicker oppossed to a coffee mug which is supposed to keep your coffee hot.
No, I prefer coffee.
It is correct to say "I prefer this to that" (for example, "I prefer tea to coffee"). This would mean that you have a preference for, or favor, tea over coffee. "Than" is for comparisons: this is [more, greater, better, etc.] than that. But you would say "I would rather do this than that."
he prefers tea more!
Maybe, but I prefer to use fresh sausages.
Totally matter of preference. I prefer coffee over tea.
Who ever wrote this question is wrong my friend's mom drinks a lot of Indian tea and sometimes coffee. They are suppose to drink tea. this is the right answer.
Milk coffee made with espresso coffee and topped with warm milk. Served with brioche which is a sweet bread. The bread is dipped into the milk coffee before eating.