@shawnp0wers I think I get it! Please don't nitpick on every error I make, they are likely far more than I know, but I don't mind to be corrected often so I maybe improve slightly.
@hehemrin My non-native English-speaking friend, you TOTALLY get a pass on such nuance. Even native speakers mess this one up all the time.
“Less” refers to a measurable amount, “fewer” refers to a smaller quantity of individual items.
So, “less water”, and, “fewer glasses of water” — it’s really subtle, but something Facebook should have caught. :)
@shawnp0wers Thanks. In this example - if you change "posts" to "content" - would "less" be correct then?
@hehemrin Honestly, you understand it better than… 75% of Americans. (Really!)
If you are clear on then/than — you could basically teach grammar classes, lol!
@shawnp0wers (Hmm ..."in" English grammar might be incorrect, maybe "at". Grammar is so difficult.)
@hehemrin hmmm… in/at both sound correct to me. :)