The comparative is taller and the superlative is tallest.Tall, taller, tallest.
comparative-taller superlative-tallest
Yes, it is the comparative form of tall.
Taller is an adjective. It is the comparative form of tall, meaning "more tall." The superlative form is tallest.
The word tall *is* an adjective. The comparative and superlative are taller and tallest.
comparative
Taller is the comparative of tall.
The comparative is taller and the superlative is tallest.Tall, taller, tallest.
comparative-taller superlative-tallest
Yes, it is the comparative form of tall.
Taller is an adjective. It is the comparative form of tall, meaning "more tall." The superlative form is tallest.
A comparative is the form of adjective or adverb used to compare two things. Examples of Comparatives Here are some examples of comparatives (comparatives shaded): Mark is taller. (taller = comparative of the adjective tall) Mark listens more attentively these days.
Comparative is like She is TALLER than him. Superlative is like She is the TALLEST in the class.
The word tall *is* an adjective. The comparative and superlative are taller and tallest.
Nominative pronouns are often used in comparative sentences, i.e. "He is taller than I am."
positive: tall Bob is tall. comparative: taller Bob is taller than Jim. superlative: tallest Bob is the tallest person in his class.
The three degrees of comparison are:positive - no comparison (e.g. tall)comparative - between two things (e.g. taller, taller of, taller than)superlative - between three or more things (e.g. tallest, tallest of, the tallest)