From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmore likemore likePROBABLYused when giving an amount or number that you think is closer to being right than one that has been mentioned
The builders say they’ll be finished in three months, but I think it’ll be more like six. →likeExamples from the Corpusmore like• Cyrix says the computer actually performsmore like a 200 megahertz Pentium-based machine.• It seems more like a bad motel in JerseyCity.• This was more like a pause in the struggle.• As Compaq's products become more like other firms', they are starting to look overpriced.• The seven children there had seemed more like seventeen.• People begin to actmore like themselves again.