Both are correct. Use proudest except where most proud seems better. Proudest is the English way of making the superlative, and most proud is the French way. Since the Norman Conquest of 1066, which imposed a form of French upon English speakers, using frenchified vocabulary and grammar may be seen as somehow higher class. Utter nonsense, but there you go. One rule that almost works is this: monosyllabic or native English adjectives take -er and -est, borrowed polysyllabic adjectives take "more" and "most."
"Proudest" Is a real word, a superlative of "proud" and both are correct. Although choosing between the two is a matter of preference, the phrase "most prideful" is also used when describing arrogance in a person.
Most proud
Most proud
"You are most welcome" is correct grammar.
The colloquial phrase is "most probably" and in correct grammar is just "probably."
Depends on the context of the sentence, but yes, most of the time
You're thw most precious gift God has given me.
what is the comparative and superlative form of ? polite tiny calm useful dark tasty old boring interesting nervoos sad new cold funny famous loud expencive rich importand terrible nice
it is proud, prouder, and proudest. not most proud, most prouder, or most proudest.
"You are most welcome" is correct grammar.
Yes it is.
No, the phrase "at the most earliest" is not correct grammar. "Most" and "earliest" are both superlatives, so using them together is redundant. The correct phrase would be "at the earliest" or "at the most."
sunnysunniersunniest
No, the correct grammar is "you and Bob." Using "and" helps to combine the two entities into a single unit, emphasizing that both "you" and "Bob" are part of the same group.
Please improve your question and resubmitt it when the grammar is correct.
The green moss was most slippery when it was wet.
El camino
Yes, I am. I am from Englang I wish I WASN'T! But England is the most proudest country I know, it always brags about how cool their country is, It's so annoying! I HATE ENGLAND, its dirty, cold and rains all the time. I HATE ENGLAND!! :)
Thank you, thank you for asking about this pet peeve. "I am proud of my girls" is correct. You make most ordinary nouns plural by simply adding the letter s. Apostrophe s after a noun is a possessive form. For example, you would say "I am proud of my girl's athletic achievements". You are talking about the achievements that 'belong to' your girl.
The correct grammar is "you have just been." This structure follows the typical order of subject (you) + auxiliary verb (have) + adverb (just) + main verb (been).