Yes, the word redder is the comparative form of the adjective red.
The superlative form is reddest.
No, the comparative form of red is "more red." "Redder" is the comparative form of the adjective "red."
The comparative form of busy is busier.
The comparative form of friendly is friendlier.
comparative form is cleaner superlative form is cleanest
The comparative form of "central" is "more central."
The comparative form of "clean" is "cleaner."
positive: red comparative: redder superlative: reddest
redder
redder
redder
redder, reddest
Dative ; Red Comparative ; Redder ( or More red) Superlative, ; Reddest. ( or most red)
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.
redder, reddest; sadder, saddest.
redder
redecoraterededicateredeemredefineredemptionredialredistrict
That could be "redder."