Is more better grammatically correct?

Because the comparative form of good is better, you can't say "more better." So then, you can say "She's much better than he is" (or in very rare cases "She's much more good than he is") but "She's much more better than he is" is incorrect. I hope this helps. Don't forget to subscribe to our Word of the Day e-mails!
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Is the word more better correct?

“More” implies a higher level of “good.” Therefore, “more better” would imply a level that is better than better. “More better” is never correct. If you want to say that something is better than good, you say it is “better,” but if you want to say it is more than better, you say that it is “best.”
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Is even more better grammatically correct?

It would make sense, syntactically, to say that if “A and B are better than C”, and “A is better than B”, then “A is more better than C than B”. Nevertheless, native speakers do not use this construction, and you should use “even better” instead: B is better than C, and A is even better than B.
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Is much more superior grammatically correct?

Is it correct to use "more superior"? "More superior" is incorrect (at least in AmE), since "superior" = "better", and we wouldn't say "more better".
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What is the meaning of the more the better?

the more (people come to my party), the better: a greater number (of people coming to my party) will make it (a) better (party) idiom.
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How do you use the more the better in a sentence?

The crust is dark and serious, the more the better. He leaps so nicely, I thought the more, the better.
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Can we use more superior?

This is because superior is a non-gradable adjective. Non-gradable adjectives can't be used comparatively or superlatively. (In other words, you can't say or write more superior or most superior in comparison sentences.)
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Can we say more happy?

No, “more happier” is not grammatically correct as there is no need to use the word “more”. “Happier” is the correct form of the word.
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