This is a comparison. We have the image of the people as "....systematic hunters" versus "mere scavengers." We do not need the second "as."
The Idiom is "AS...RATHER THAN..." and a noun follows each part of the idiom.
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hmm, as...rather than.. idiomatic expr.? never seen beforeVivianKerr wrote:This is a comparison. We have the image of the people as "....systematic hunters" versus "mere scavengers." We do not need the second "as."
The Idiom is "AS...RATHER THAN..." and a noun follows each part of the idiom.
Rather than - shows preference. This expression is generally used in 'parallel' structures. e.g - with two nouns, adjectives, adverbs, infinitives or -ing forms.
>>'rather' is an adverb here, and in the combination with 'than' functions as described above.
>>'as' means 'in the same way that'













