A wise enemy is as good as a foolish friend.
No. Substitute "better" for "gooder." The names of the girls must be capitalized, people's names are proper nouns. Adjective good, comparative better, superlative best.
"Sarah is better than I" is the traditional answer (even aside from the misspelling of "beeter"). The reason is that, by convention, "than" when following a predicate adjective in the comparative form is normally supposed to be interpreted as subordinate conjunction that begins an adverbial clause of the form, "than {explicitly stated subject} {implicit form of the verb 'to be' appropriate to the stated subject} {basic form the adjective that, in its comparative form, precedes 'than'}", where each phrase between curly brackets defines an explicitly stated or implicit word as indicated. Thus, the sentence given is to be understood, with the implicit words between square brackets, as "Sarah is better than I [am good]" However, note that the above rule is not necessarily followed when the verb in the independent clause of the sentence is a transitive verb and the comparative adjective follows an object of that verb rather than a predicate adjective, as in the example sentence. In that instance, there are two different possibilities: "My mother likes my sister better than I" means that my mother likes my sister better than I like my sister, but "My mother likes my sister better than me" means that my mother likes my sister better than my mother likes me.
Better can be an adjective or adverb. It is the comparative form of "good" or "well." Adverbs describe a verb, so if you're using it in a 'did something better' sense, then it's an adverb. It would be an adjective if describing a noun, someone or something better than someone else or better than previously. It can also be used in a variety of idioms.
There are two words: in this case, much is an adverb, and better may be an adverb.Better is the comparative form of the adjectives good and well, and the adverb well. Much is an adverb of degree modifying better, whether an adjective or adverb.Much by itself can be a noun, e.g. we have risked much.
Those who get half a loaf become happy because half a loaf is better than none.
better
Positive, Comparative and Superlative. Example - good, better and best. From Writers INC.
Better
The positive degree is the adjective itself, for example English "good". The irregularity only comes in with the comparative "better" and superlative "best", as opposed to good, gooder, goodest. Back-forming the positive from the comparative or superlative is not obvious, obviously, because it is irregular.
"Better" is the comparative of "good." "Best" is the uperlative.
Better is the comparative of good. The superlative is best.
No. Substitute "better" for "gooder." The names of the girls must be capitalized, people's names are proper nouns. Adjective good, comparative better, superlative best.
The forms for the adjective 'good' are: positive: good comparative: better superlative: best My entry was good. Your entry was better than mine, but Jane's was the best. She won the prize.
there is no such thing as the superlative and comparative degree of better because better is the comparative form for well or good and the superlative for good or well is best
The term degrees applies only to comparative adjectives, which can compare characteristics of two or more nouns. The degrees are positive (no comparison), comparative (compares two things), and superlative (compares with more than two things).Examples (positive-comparative-superlative)good/better/besthigh/higher/highestbad/worse/worstbeautiful/more beautiful/most beautiful
The word 'judge' is a noun and a verb.Adjectives are the words that have a comparative form.Examples:Ms. Green would make a good judge. (positive adjective)Mr. Brown would make a better judge. (comparative adjective)The best judge is Judge Winter. (superlative adjective)
The comparative form of good is better.