Then or than — the one‑letter difference that changes your meaning
Most grammar details don’t matter. This one does.
A client sent me a report last month. Seven times she wrote ‘then’ when she meant ‘than‘. She hadn’t noticed a single one – and neither had the colleague who checked it.
The difference is small but real.
Then is about time – what comes next.
Than is about comparison – what is more, less, better, worse.
Quick win:
Comparing two things? It’s than. “Better than expected.” “More than enough.”
Describing what comes next? It’s then. “First the call, then the email.”


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