more humid, most humid
The comparative and superlative degrees of clean are cleaner and cleanest.
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
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.
it was very humid outside because yesterday it rained An example would be, It is very humid outside. The weather in the Carribean is very humid. When it's very hot and humid outside, be sure to drink several glasses of throughout the day. Tropical plants grow best when the air is warm and humid. Grandma hates sticky, humid weather, so she spent the summer sitting near the air conditioner. When it's very humid outside, my hair gets frizzy. The temperature was made even more unbearable by how humid it was. It was a hot and humid day at the beach.
Yes, it is. It is the superlative form of the adjective "damp" (slightly wet, or humid).
more humid, most humid
The superlative form of "movingly" is "most movingly."
The superlative form of clean is "cleanest".
The superlative form of ancient is ancientosity
The superlative form of clean is "cleanest".
comparative - merrier superlative - merriest
The superlative form of the word "genuine" is "most genuine."
"Older" is the comparative form of old. The superlative form is oldest.
The comparative form of cloudy is "cloudier". The superlative form is "cloudiest".
"Poke" is a verb and a noun and, as such, does not have a superlative form.
Teach is a verb and so has no superlative form.