more sturdy
Sturdier. (or less sturdy) Superlative - Sturdiest
The comparative degree of "sturdy" is "sturdier," and the superlative degree is "sturdiest." These forms are used to compare the strength or robustness of two or more objects or subjects. For example, you might say, "This table is sturdier than that one," and "This is the sturdiest table in the store."
more tenacious
The comparative form of "sturdy" is "sturdier," and the superlative form is "sturdiest." These forms are used to compare the strength or durability of items, with "sturdier" indicating a greater degree of sturdiness than another and "sturdiest" indicating the highest degree among three or more.
The correct spelling of the adjective is sturdy(well-built, strong, durable).It changes the Y to IE in forming the comparative, which is sturdier.
sturdier, sturdiest dirtier, dirtiest more faithful, most faithful
There is no comparative of get.
The comparative of "first" is "earlier" or "prior".
Sturdy is not a verb but an adjective and therefore has no past tense, unless you mean "this was sturdy" etc.
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