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Comparative and Superlative Adjectives

There are 3 rules regarding the comparative and superlative forms of adjectives: 1. For short adjectives (adjectives with 1 syllable) we add -er in the comparative form and -est in the superlative form: Short adjective Comparative Superlative

small tall cheap long


Examples: Comparatives

smaller than taller than cheaper than longer than

the smallest the tallest the cheapest the longest

France is smaller than Argentina. Cheese is cheaper than caviar. The Tower of London is older than the Empire State Building. Superlatives Yesterday was the hottest* day of the year. The Mississippi is the longest river in America. Bill Gates is one of the richest men in the world. * Note that when the last 3 letters of a word are consonant - vowel - consonant in that order, when we add extra letters, the last letter becomes a double: Adjective Comparative Superlative

big hot fat

bigger than hotter than fatter than

the biggest the hottest the fattest

2. For adjectives which end with y, short and long, we replace the y with -ier in the comparative form and -iest in the superlative form: Adjective Comparative Superlative

happy heavy lucky friendly


Examples: Comparatives

happier than heavier than luckier than friendlier than

the happiest the heaviest the luckiest the friendliest

Iron is heavier than wood. He is friendlier than his mother. She is prettier than her sister. Superlatives He is the happiest man I know. This is the dirtiest room in the house. You are the luckiest person in the world. 3. For long adjectives (with more than 1 syllable) which don't end with y, the adjective remains the same and we add more in the comparative and the most in the superlative form: Long adjective Comparative Superlative

interesting dangerous beautiful expensive


Examples: Comparatives

more interesting than more dangerous than more beautiful than more expensive than

the most interesting the most dangerous the most beautiful the most expensive

The Da Vinci Code is more interesting than Angels and Demons. The World Cup final of 1978 was more exciting than the World Cup final of 1990. Tokyo is more expensive than New York. Superlatives She is the most beautiful girl I know. That was the most exciting match of the year. London is the most interesting city in England. So there are 3 rules. There are also 3 exceptions: Irregular adjective Comparative Superlative

good bad far


Examples Comparatives

better than worse than farther than / further than

the best the worst the farthest / the furthest

The first Ice Age film was better than the second one. The third Ice Age film was worse than the second one. I got lost. The hotel was further than I thought. Superlatives Back to the Future is the best film I've seen. That was the worst song of the concert. 25 miles is the farthest I've run in one day.

Note that we can say: Tokyo is more expensive than Los Angeles. Or Los Angeles is less expensive than Tokyo. If we use less, the adjective remains in its original form: This shop is less cheap than that one. She is less friendly than her sister. When two things are the same we use as He is as tall as me. Brad Pitt is as handsome as George Clooney. Similarily, if we make a negative sentence, we can use as to say two things aren't the same: Italy isn't as cheap as Argentina. This team isn't as good as last year's team.

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