Comparative and Superlative Adjectives
Comparative and Superlative Adjectives
Comparative
adjectives compare two things. Superlative adjectives compare more than two
things
Commonly, adjectives that contain only one syllable or end in 'y' use 'er' to
form comparatives and 'est' to form superlatives. For adjectives ending in y,
change the 'y' to 'i' before adding the 'er' or 'est'.
- old – older – oldest
- young – younger – youngest
- pretty – prettier – prettiest
- long – longer – longest
- short – shorter – shortest
- bright – brighter – brightest
- close – closer – closest
- happy – happier - happiest
Adjectives with
two or more syllables do not change but instead add more to form
comparatives and most to form superlatives.
- respectable – more respectable –
most respectable
- beautiful – more beautiful – most
beautiful
- preferable – more preferable – most
preferable
Some adjectives
have different forms of comparatives and superlatives.
- good – better – best
- bad – worse – worst
- little – less – least
- much (many) – more – most
- far – further - furthest
The word than
typically appears in comparative sentences.
- Amy is smarter than Betty.
- Chad is stronger than Dan.
- Greg is more diligent than his
brother.
- I have more apples than he.
- She likes him more than me.
Superlatives are
typically accompanied by the word the.
- Tom is the oldest man in town.
- Paul is the tallest boy in the
neighborhood.
- That shade of blue is the most
beautiful color.
- This is the longest song that I
have ever heard.