In English, you would say, "My glass is fuller than yours." This statement compares the amount of liquid in your glass to that in someone else's, indicating that your glass contains more. If you were looking for a translation, in Spanish, it would be "Mi vaso está más lleno que el tuyo."
The issue with the adjective "full" is that it already denotes an extreme state; such states cannot be made comparative or superlative in a normal sense. Other examples might include "perfect," "unique," etc.
The correct way is, "different from yours".
say try and come right in with ''is better than yours''
"My mustache is better than yours, HO."
They say the game world will be smaller and fuller than Oblivion. Hopefully there's a bit more variety.
To claim ownership or possession of something, you would say that it is "yours."
Simon Fuller who is a television producer created American Idol.
You can say "നീയുടെയാണ്" (neeyudeyaanu) in Malayalam to express "I'm yours."
It is not incorrect to say "yours and your family's", but it is custom (considered good manners) to place yourself last in a group spoken about, as "your family's and yours".
No. Yours is the possessive form. "Your" used in a sentence can refer to a single person as in "this is your car" or when you are talking to a group of people and say "This is your country".
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