More is comparative. Most would be superlative.
comparative: more nutritious superlative: most nutritious
cleaner, cleanest
The comparative form is more selfish. The superlative form is most selfish.
"Beg" is a verb and, as such, does not have a comparative or superlative form.
Since the word "dangerous" is considered a long adjective (of 3 or more syllables), the words "more" and "most" are used to form the comparative and superlative forms. The comparative form is more dangerous. The superlative form is most dangerous.
If splendidest was a word, it would be a superlative. The comparative form of splendid is more splendid, the superlative form is most splendid.
The comparative form is "more fantastic", and the superlative form is "most fantastic".
comparative: more nutritious superlative: most nutritious
comparative - more modest superlative - most modest
The comparative for and superlative for for the word expensive is: More expensive Most expensive
more in, most in
The comparative form of risky is riskier, and the superlative form is riskiest. The word risky is short enough to form the comparative and superlative forms this way. For longer words, you would need to precede the word with more (for comparative) and most (for superlative).
The comparative form of "influential" is "more influential" and the superlative form is "most influential."
The comparative form of "meaningful" is "more meaningful" and the superlative form is "most meaningful."
The superlative form is most beautiful, and the comparative form is more beautiful.
the comparative and superlative forms of the word near are nearer(in comparative form) and nearest(in superlative form).
I think, more alone - comparative most alone - superlative.