Some adjectives it is possible to use more or -ier
I think friendly is one of those adjectives:
I think Jack is more friendly than Jill.
I think Jill is friendlier than Jack.
The comparative form of friendly is friendlier.
It would be 'friendlier' but I'm sure you can use either.
The comparative form of friendly is friendlier.
Comparative:friendlier superlative:friendliest i love gino p.he is the hottest guy on this whole world!!:-)
Comparative: More crude Superlative: Most crude 'Cruder' and 'crudest' are perfectly acceptable, and indeed more idiomatic than 'more crude' and 'most crude'.
Friendlier and friendliest, respectively. More and most friendly are also correct, sometimes.
More wicked Most wicked
The comparative form of friendly is friendlier. For example, "John is friendlier than Mary."
friendlier, friendliest
The comparative form of "friendly" is "friendlier," and the superlative form is "friendliest."
Shallower, shallowest. More shallow, most shallow. Both forms are acceptable, but the first (..er, ..est) is probably more commonly used.
friendlier, friendliest