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The superlative form of "generous" is "most generous."
The comparative is grumpier and the superlative is grumpiest.
The superlative form of the word "genuine" is "most genuine."
The superlative of ignorant is "most ignorant."
comparative = sadder superlative = saddest
"More familiar" is the comparative form of familiar. "Most familiar" is the superlative form.
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.
I'm not familiar with the word, but the comparative form of multi-syllabic adjectives is formed by adding the word "more" in front of it. The superlative form of multi-syllabic adjectives is formed by adding the word "most" in front of it.
The tally marks I'm familiar with cannot have negative numbers because they are used to count real things and there cannot be a negative apple
If "positive" is really the word you mean: Adjectives may be positive, comparative or superlative. In English, pronouns are not described as positive but adjectives are positive and verbs can be positive or negative. A positive adjective is the simple for of the adjective, from which the comparative and superlative are formed. For example, smart is the positive form of the adjective; smarter is the comparative form; and smartest is the superlative form. Verbs can be positive or negative. for example, has or has not (hasn't); does or does not (doesn't); can or can not (can't), etc.
You're familiar with the xy-plane. A line with negative slope is one that goes down toward the right. A curve has a negative slope at a point if the tangent line to the curve at that point has a negative slope.
a comparative noun uses er at the end or for long words like beautiful, it would be more. Ex: More beautiful a superlative noun is the same thing but different. Instead of er at the end you are comparing 3 things or more so you use -est. again you cannot do beautifulest so you do most. Ex: Most beautiful. so comparative: -er, more superlative: -est, most
Sleep is a noun and does not have a superlative. Sleepy is an adjective and the superlative is "sleepiest."
The superlative for willing would be "most willing." There is no one-word superlative.
"Studying" is not a superlative, as it is not an adjective. "Most studious" is a superlative of "studious."
"Bib" is a noun and, as such, does not have a superlative form.
most superlative is the superlative form of superlative