straight, straighter
comparative straighter and the superlative the straightest
straighter, straightest
Straight, Straighter, Straightest
The comparative form of "straight" is "straighter," and the superlative form is "straightest." These forms are used to compare the degree of straightness between two or more objects or instances. For example, you might say, "This line is straighter than that one," or "This is the straightest line I've ever seen."
comparative
No, the word 'mysterious' is an adjective, the positive form.Nouns do not have comparative forms.Adjectives have positive, comparative, and superlative forms; for example:mysterious (positive)more mysterious (comparative)most mysterious (superlative)
comparative
comparative
more positive
straightest
The 3 forms of adjectives are comparative, superlative, and positive. Example: Positive- bad Comparative- worse Superlative- worst
The answer to that question is comparative.