redder, reddest
Yes, the word redder is the comparative form of the adjective red.The superlative form is reddest.
positive: red comparative: redder superlative: reddest
Dative ; Red Comparative ; Redder ( or More red) Superlative, ; Reddest. ( or most red)
redder
redder
redder
The word thrifty is short enough that the comparative and superlative forms are thriftier and thriftiest.
redder, reddest
Yes, "redder" is the comparative form of the adjective "red." It is used to compare two things with one being more red than the other.
Yes, it is. It is the comparative form of the adjective "long" (relatively large in length or duration).
redder, reddest sadder, saddest
The comparative form compares two things eg the red car is faster than the blue car, (faster is the comparative adjective).The superlative form is used to compare three or more things and to pick out one as being more (something) than all the others. The red car is fast and so is the blue car but the silver one is the fastest, (fastest is the superlative adjective)