An adverb that indicates a comparison of three or more actions. Examples are, she ran fastest of the whole class in P.T., he was laughing loudest at the end of the movie.
No. Superlative is an adjective. The adverb form is superlatively (in a comparative manner).
harder, hardest
Soonest
easily is an adverb and does not have a superlative. easy is an adjective and has the superlative form easiest. eg That was the easiest game we have had.
I'm not familiar with the word, but the comparative degree of an adverb is formed by placing the word "more" in front of it and the superlative degree of an adverb is formed by placing the word "most" in front of it.
tunefully is the adverb, most tunefully the superlative. She sang most tunefully
No. Superlative is an adjective. The adverb form is superlatively (in a comparative manner).
no it is superlative adjective. not an adverb.
Yes, it can be. Worst can be a superlative adjective or a superlative adverb (meaning most badly).
No, it is an adjective (superlative of kind).The adverb form would be most kindly (superlative of kindly).
harder, hardest
No. Safest is the superlative form of the adjective safe (most safe).The adverb form of safe is safely, and the superlative form of the adverb is most safely.
Busiest is not an adverb. It's the superlative form of the adjective busy.
The word "best" is a comparative (superlative) adjective, not an adverb.
Soonest
easily is an adverb and does not have a superlative. easy is an adjective and has the superlative form easiest. eg That was the easiest game we have had.
No. Closest is a superlative adjective for "close." The adverb form is "most closely."