The answer to that question is comparative.
The three degrees (of comparison) for adjectives are Positive, Comparative and Superlative. Example: hard (positive) harder (comparative) hardest (superlative)
Positive,Comparative and Superlative.
positive degree=few comparative degree=fewer superlative degree=fewest
POSITIVE- scarceCOMPARATIVE- scarcerSUPERLATIVE- scarcest
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.
comparative
In the English Language The word 'worse' acts as Dative, Comparative. We do NOT say Dative ; Worse Comparative; Worser Superlative ; Worsest The Superlative is ' WORST'. In a jocular sense you may hear these words said. However, to describe the weather becoming more bad , we would say 'The weather is becoming worse and worse'. NOT worser. Or ' The werather is at its worst', when it cannot become any more worse.
comparative
comparative
No, the word 'mysterious' is an adjective, the positive form.Nouns do not have comparative forms.Adjectives have positive, comparative, and superlative forms; for example:mysterious (positive)more mysterious (comparative)most mysterious (superlative)
The 3 forms of adjectives are comparative, superlative, and positive. Example: Positive- bad Comparative- worse Superlative- worst
Lazy is the positive degree. The comparative is lazier, and the superlative is laziest.
superlative
the answer to this question is superlative
positive: red comparative: redder superlative: reddest
more positive, most positive
positive