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3rd Lesson Comparative and Superlative Adjectives

The document discusses comparative and superlative adjectives. Comparative adjectives compare two items or people, using suffixes like "-er" or being formed irregularly. Superlative adjectives indicate the highest or lowest amount, using suffixes like "-est" or being formed irregularly. The document provides rules for regularly forming comparatives and superlatives and lists common irregular forms, giving examples to illustrate their use.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
130 views

3rd Lesson Comparative and Superlative Adjectives

The document discusses comparative and superlative adjectives. Comparative adjectives compare two items or people, using suffixes like "-er" or being formed irregularly. Superlative adjectives indicate the highest or lowest amount, using suffixes like "-est" or being formed irregularly. The document provides rules for regularly forming comparatives and superlatives and lists common irregular forms, giving examples to illustrate their use.

Uploaded by

salia
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Comparative and Superlative Adjectives

Adjectives can compare two things or more than two things. When we make these

comparisons, we use comparative and superlative forms of adjectives.

I. Comparatives :
Comparative adjectives are used to compare differences between the two objects they

modify (larger, smaller, faster, higher). They are used in sentences where two nouns are

compared, in this pattern:

Noun (subject) + verb + comparative adjective + than + noun (object).

Examples

My house is larger than hers.

This box is smaller than the one I lost.

Your dog runs faster than Jim's dog.

The rock flew higher than the roof.

II. Superlative adjectives :

Superlative adjectives are used to describe an object which is at the upper or lower limit of

a quality (the tallest, the smallest, the fastest, the highest). They are used in sentences where a

subject is compared to a group of objects.

Noun (subject) + verb + the + superlative adjective + noun (object).

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Examples

My house is the largest one in our neighborhood.

This is the smallest box I've ever seen.

Your dog ran the fastest of any dog in the race.

We all threw our rocks at the same time. My rock flew the highest. ("of all the rocks" is

understood)

III. The rules to form comparatives and superlatives:

1. One syllable adjective ending in a silent 'e' — nice

Comparative — add 'r' — nicer

Superlative — add 'st' — nicest

2. One syllable adjective ending in one vowel and one consonant — big

Comparative — the consonant is doubled and 'er' is added —bigger

Superlative — the consonant is doubled and 'est' is added—biggest

3. One syllable adjective ending in more than one consonant or more than a vowel (or long

vowels) — high, cheap, soft.

Comparative — 'er' is added — higher, cheaper, softer.

Superlative — 'est is added — highest, cheapest , softest.

4. A two syllable adjective ending in 'y' — happy


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Comparative — 'y' becomes 'i' and 'er' is added — happier

Superlative — 'y' becomes 'i' and 'est' is added — happiest

5. Tow syllable or more adjectives without 'y' at the end — exciting

Comparative — more + the adjective + than — more exciting than

Superlative — more + the adjective + than — the most exciting

I. Irregular comparatives and superlatives


These are very common adjectives have completely irregular comparative and superlative forms.

Adjective Comparative Superlative

good better best

bad worse worst

little less least

much more most

far further / farther furthest / farthest

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Examples

Today is the worst day I've had in a long time.

You play tennis better than I do.

This is the least expensive sweater in the store.

This sweater is less expensive than that one.

I ran pretty far yesterday, but I ran even farther today.

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