It is none of these, it's an adverb. As adjectives, merryis positive, merrier is compoarative and merriest is superlative.
Yes, but adverbs DO have degrees of comparison, therefore - "merrily" is positive.
Lazy is the positive degree. The comparative is lazier, and the superlative is laziest.
the answer to this question is superlative
positive
The English language does not have 'positive' nouns (location is a noun); the designation for 'positive' is used for adjectives. For example: Positive: nice Comparative: nicer Superlative: nicest Positive: positive Comparative: more positive Superlative: most positive
If "positive" is really the word you mean: Adjectives may be positive, comparative or superlative. In English, pronouns are not described as positive but adjectives are positive and verbs can be positive or negative. A positive adjective is the simple for of the adjective, from which the comparative and superlative are formed. For example, smart is the positive form of the adjective; smarter is the comparative form; and smartest is the superlative form. Verbs can be positive or negative. for example, has or has not (hasn't); does or does not (doesn't); can or can not (can't), etc.
"Merrily" is the positive degree of the adverb "merrily."Specifically, the degrees of an adverb range from the basic, positive degree to the second, comparative degree to the third, highest, superlative degree. So the comparative degree in this case is "more merrily." The superlative degree is "most merrily."
comparative
comparative form of happily can be happier &superlative form of happily can be happiest
comparative
comparative
No, the word 'mysterious' is an adjective, the positive form.Nouns do not have comparative forms.Adjectives have positive, comparative, and superlative forms; for example:mysterious (positive)more mysterious (comparative)most mysterious (superlative)
The 3 forms of adjectives are comparative, superlative, and positive. Example: Positive- bad Comparative- worse Superlative- worst
Lazy is the positive degree. The comparative is lazier, and the superlative is laziest.
superlative
the answer to this question is superlative
positive: red comparative: redder superlative: reddest
more positive, most positive