Annoying is not an adverb, it is an adjective. The comparative of the adjective annoying is more annoying.
Annoyingly is the adverb form of annoying. More annoyingly is the comparative form of annoyingly. Example: Can you find anyone more annoyingly chipper than Barbara?
The adverb form is "easily" and the comparative is "more easily."
"Original" is an adjective, not an adverb. The comparative form is "more original". The adverb is "originally" and the comparative of that would be "more originally".
harder, hardest
A comparative adverb indicates a greater degree of the verb or adjective that it modifies. Some examples of modifying "good" with a comparative adverb would be: really good, extremely good, very good.
The comparative form of the adverb soon is SOONER: She arrived SOONER than the other guests.
The adverb form is "easily" and the comparative is "more easily."
"Original" is an adjective, not an adverb. The comparative form is "more original". The adverb is "originally" and the comparative of that would be "more originally".
more annoying, most annoying
The adjective stranger is the comparative form of the adjective strange. The adverb "more strangely" is the comparative form of the adverb, strangely.
The comparative form of the adverb "often" is "more often."
Yes. It can be an adverb or an adjective. adverb: They could have done worse. (comparative of badly) adjective: Now they were in worse trouble. (comparative of bad)
harder, hardest
A comparative adverb indicates a greater degree of the verb or adjective that it modifies. Some examples of modifying "good" with a comparative adverb would be: really good, extremely good, very good.
The comparative form of the adverb soon is SOONER: She arrived SOONER than the other guests.
bad
higher
No, it is not an adverb. The adjective clearer is the comparative form of clear.