I did a quick search on google and, not only I see both versions, I even see both of them in the same document.
Example: Region-Enhancing Network for Semantic Segmentation of Remote-Sensing Imagery - PMC
the dataset with much more images
the dataset with many more images
Specific searches show these numbers:
- About 4,520,000 results for “much more images”
- About 2,780,000 results for “many more images”
Is there any difference between them?
Thanks!
Non native speaker here.
“Much” refers to something not countable, like “much more milk”, and is used without plural, “liter” is countable such that you could say “many more liters of milk” (note the plural of liter). So while I’d say the latter is more correct according to grammatical rules, if both are common, both can be considered correct, as rules are often rewritten to adapt to the way the English language is used.
FWIW, as a native speaker, “much more images” is incorrect enough that seeing it would tell me that the author’s first language isn’t English.
Having complex and arbitrary grammatical rules solely to telegraph education sucks though, so vive la revolution.
Thanks for the confirmation!
Do you know what could be the explanation for google showing more results with “many more images”?
Root cause? The complexity of English makes it an absurd choice for a worldwide standard.
Hehe, fair enough :)
Every language is complex, wtf are you smoking? If anything I’d say English is the best choice for a global standard because of how adaptible it is and the fact that it’s already the global common language for a bunch of industries. Reversing that will be challenging if not impossible
That was my reasoning, which is correct in my native language (Spanish: "muchas más imágenes). That’s why seeing more results for “much more images” suprised me.