degree
Some adjectives form Irregular form.EXamplE:positive:wellive: bestcomparative:betterSuperlat
Some adjectives form Irregular form.EXamplE:positive:wellive: bestcomparative:betterSuperlat
You compare adjectives and adverbs, not nouns.
decrease of adjectives
Comparison, in grammar, is a property of adjectives and adverbs in most languages; it describes systems that distinguish the degree to which the modifier modifies its complement.
Superlative degree. earliest and fiercest are superlative adjectives
Positive Degree of Comparison.
.The degree of comparison for early is earlier
superlative adjectives use 'the'. They end with 'est' or add 'most' before the adj. The biggest house. The most beautiful woman.
It is the highest degree of comparison
The four degrees in English refer to levels of comparison used with adjectives and adverbs: positive, comparative, superlative, and absolute. The positive degree describes a quality without comparison (e.g., "tall"), the comparative degree compares two entities (e.g., "taller"), the superlative degree compares three or more entities (e.g., "tallest"), and the absolute degree emphasizes the quality without relation to others (e.g., "very tall"). These degrees help convey nuances in description and comparison.