Neither. Pretty is the positive degree. The comparative is prettier; the superlative is prettiest.
The one with "prettier" in it.
Cute, beautiful, gorgeous
The word "are" is the verb in the sentence "The flowers are very pretty."."The", is an article"flowers", is a noun"are", is a verb"very", is an adjective modifying "flowers""pretty" is an adjective modifying "flowers"
The correct spelling of the adjective is prettier (more pretty).
No, the word 'pretty' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example, a pretty flower, a pretty dress.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:That's a pretty flower. Where did you get it? (The adjective 'pretty' describes the noun 'flower'; the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'flower' in the second sentence.)
i had to be pretty sharp to answer the word problem correctly.
Perhaps you mean the comparative form: the comparative form of the adjective pretty is prettier. (The superlative form is prettiest, but comparative sounds more like cumulative.)
For the adjective "pretty" -- prettier is the comparative, and prettiest is the superlative.
Cute, beautiful, gorgeous
"Prettier" is the comparative form of the adjective "pretty."
'Prettier' is the comparative adjective of 'pretty'. If it were a verb, you would be able to insert it into this sentence: 'I am going to ------ tomorrow.' However, 'I am going to prettier tomorrow' does not make grammatical sense. If you wanted an adverbial form, it would be 'more prettily'.
No. Prettier is a comparative adjective (more pretty). An adverb form is prettily / more prettily.
The word "are" is the verb in the sentence "The flowers are very pretty."."The", is an article"flowers", is a noun"are", is a verb"very", is an adjective modifying "flowers""pretty" is an adjective modifying "flowers"
The correct spelling of the adjective is prettier (more pretty).
No, the word 'pretty' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example, a pretty flower, a pretty dress.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:That's a pretty flower. Where did you get it? (The adjective 'pretty' describes the noun 'flower'; the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'flower' in the second sentence.)
i had to be pretty sharp to answer the word problem correctly.
'An' adjective not 'a' adjective. A sentence cannot be an adjective. An adjective is a word used to describe something or someone. For example - merry, pretty. yeah well the infinitive phrase is what there looking for so its noun
Yes we can.For short adjectives the comparative form is -- adjective + er + than -- big bigger than , tall taller than , pretty prettier thanFor short adjectives the superlative form is -- the + adjective + est -- big the biggest, tall the tallest, pretty the prettiest.(Watch the spelling for adjectives ending in -y)For longer adjectives the comparative form is - more + adjective + than -- more interesting than, more exciting than.For longer adjectives the superlative form is - the + most + adjective -- the most interesting, the most exciting.So to change a comparative into a superlative you just change the form egwider than = the widestmore unusual than = the most unusual