more graceful most graceful :D
more gracefull most gracefull
The comparative and superlative forms of "good" are very irregular: they do not contain "good" at all. The comparative form is "better"; the superlative form is "best".
Adverbs of manner and adverbs of degree can modify other adverbs, as well as adjectives in most cases. Adverbs of degree, especially, give the quality or extent of other adverbs (e.g very quickly, too quickly, exceedingly quickly, not quickly).
(of an adjective or adverb) expressing a higher degree of a quality, but not the highest possible (e.g., braver; more fiercely).Positive Comparative Superlativesimple simpler simplestsilly sillier silliestwhite whiter whitestclear clearer clearesteasy easier easiest
45
3 times 12 will give you 36 plus one will give you 37
Busy becomes busier and busiest.
most expentsive more more more,,
Comparative degree of funny: Funnier Superlative degree of funny: Funniest Thank you hope this helped :)
That is not a question, but a statement. Statements in English are suffixed by period (.), not question mark (?).heavy - heavier - heaviest
The comparative and superlative forms of "good" are very irregular: they do not contain "good" at all. The comparative form is "better"; the superlative form is "best".
Adjectives and adverbs that describe an absolute state or condition and do not have comparative or superlative forms
please give me the right answer
shier
angrier, angriest
cleverer, cleverest
'Shyer' or 'shier'; 'shyest' or 'shiest'. You could also use 'more shy' and 'most shy', which are preferable to the other terms in some respects.
In the sentence that you give, John was faster but Billy was the fastest, there are comparative adjectives, faster and fastest. The verb in this sentence is was. It is not a comparative verb, just a verb. An existential verb, to be precise.