most humid
more humid, most humid
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
The comparative and superlative degrees of clean are cleaner and cleanest.
No, the word 'humid' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as characterized by a high amount of water or water vapor; for example a humid day. The noun form 'humidity' is a concrete noun; high humidity can be felt physically, any humidity can be measured by instruments.
The comparative and superlative degrees of "white" are formed in the standard way: "whiter" and "whitest" respectively.
Yes, it is. It is the superlative form of the adjective "damp" (slightly wet, or humid).
more humid, most humid
the superlative form for movingly in most movingly
The superlative form of ancient is ancientosity
The superlative form of clean is "cleanest".
The superlative form of clean is "cleanest".
comparative - merrier superlative - merriest
The comparative form of cloudy is "cloudier". The superlative form is "cloudiest".
The superlative form of genuine is more genuine.
"Older" is the comparative form of old. The superlative form is oldest.
The superlative form of sorrowfully is most sorrowfully.
The superlative form of "softly" is "softest."