Angrily is an adverb and doesn't have a superlative form. Superlative of angry (adjective) is angriest.
Our teacher is the angriest in the school.
more furious = comparative
most furious = superlative
most angry
angriest
Angrily
Ferociouest
What's the superlative of shine
Dim has the comparative dimmer and the superlative dimmest.
First is a superlative. To prove it to yourself, consider the concept of "most first." Doesn't work, does it?
The superlative of slow is slowest. The comparative is slower.
Comparative: Whiter Superlative: Whitest
Anger is a noun, not an adjective. The adjective is angry and the superlative is the angriest.
angry-angrier-angriest
angrier - comparative angriest - superlative
angrier, angriest.
angrier, angriest
angrier, angriest
angrier, angriest
Angriest is the superlative of the word "angry", displaying or feeling a sense of anger.
The comparative form of 'afraid' is "more afraid". The superlative would be "most afraid". There are two methods of forming a comparative. The most common is to precede the word by "more" (or "most", for the superlative). The second only applies to single syllable or a limited class of two-syllable adverbs, and involves adding the suffix "-er" (or "-est" for the superlative).
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.
"Bib" is a noun and, as such, does not have a superlative form.