Mitigators with Comparatives

B2 – Upper Intermediate

What are mitigators?

Mitigators are words or phrases that soften or weaken the strength of a statement. With comparatives, they make differences sound less direct, less strong, or more polite.

Examples:

  • The revised proposal is slightly more feasible in practice.
  • Her second draft is a bit more coherent, though still unclear in parts.
  • This approach is somewhat less efficient, but easier to implement.
  • The new policy is not much more effective than the previous one.
  • His explanation is no clearer than before.

Common mitigators with comparatives

1.  “a bit / a little / slightly”

Used to show a small difference

  • This task is a bit easier than the last one.
  • She’s slightly more confident now.
  • The new model is a little faster.

2.  “somewhat / rather”

 Used for moderate, often subjective differences

  • His explanation was somewhat clearer this time.
  • The results are rather more complicated than expected.

3.  “kind of / sort of” (informal)

Used to soften opinions, often in spoken English

  • This design is kind of better than the old one.
  • It’s sort of more efficient, I think.

4.  “a little bit / just a bit”

Extra softening, often for politeness

  • Your tone sounds just a bit harsher here.
  • This version is a little bit more formal.

5.  “not much / not a lot”

 Used with negatives to minimize differences

  • This version is not much better than the previous one.
  • The two solutions are not a lot different.

6.  “no + comparative”

Emphasizes zero difference (strong but controlled tone)

  • This method is no more effective than the old one.
  • He is no better qualified than his colleague.

Uses

 To sound more polite

  • Direct: This plan is worse.
  • Mitigated: This plan is slightly worse.

 To avoid strong criticism

  • Direct: Your argument is weaker.
  • Mitigated: Your argument is a bit weaker.

 To show uncertainty or caution

  • The data is somewhat more reliable now.

 Tone differences

  • Stronger: much / far / a lot
    • This is much better.
  • Softer (mitigated): a bit / slightly
    • This is slightly better.

 Advanced speakers choose based on tone and intention, not just meaning.

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