The most delicate thing I have ever held is a butterfly. It is not the most delicate thing on the planet. I think a bubble is the most delicate item but every time I try to hold one in my hand the bubble bursts.
Since the word "dangerous" is considered a long adjective (of 3 or more syllables), the words "more" and "most" are used to form the comparative and superlative forms. The comparative form is more dangerous. The superlative form is most dangerous.
The comparative form is more courageous and the superlative is most courageous
The comparative form of hungry is hungrier
The superlative degree of word sincere can be most sincere ,or sincerest according to its use in the sentence.
Yes. Bigger is the comparative adjective in that sentence.
You use comparative and superlative when you're comparing two or more things.
To compare things we use " DEGREES OF COMPARISON. " there are 3 types of degrees, they are -: POSITIVE DEGREE , COMPARATIVE DEGREE and SUPERLATIVE DEGREE. for example -: he is as tall as his friend. [ positive sentence ] she is smarter than her friend. [ comparative sentence ] this is the tallest building in the town . [ superlative sentence ]
Yes, the adjective bigger is the comparative form of big.The superlative form is 'biggest'.
the answer is comparative=better and the superlative is best. You can also use more well and most well.better and best
For words of two syllables not ending in y, use more for the comparative and most for the superlative.
I believe for words such as foolish you need to use more and most. Comparative: More Foolish Superlative: Most Foolish
Use thesaurus.com and take your pick!
Since the word "dangerous" is considered a long adjective (of 3 or more syllables), the words "more" and "most" are used to form the comparative and superlative forms. The comparative form is more dangerous. The superlative form is most dangerous.
"The critics lavished superlatives on it."when do we use a superlative ?
With adverbs ending in -ly, you must use moreto form the comparative, and most to form the superlative.With short adverbs that do not end in -ly comparative and superlative forms are identical to adjectives: add -erto form the comparative and -est to form the superlative. If the adverb ends in e, remove it before adding the ending.
Yes.
The comparative form is more respectful and the superlative is most respectful. In general, words of three or more syllables use more and most to form the comparative and superlative forms, because adding -er or -est as a suffix (which works well with short words) tends to result in a word that is too long and difficult to pronounce.