comparative
comparative
"Easier" is the comparative form of easy. The superlative form is easiest.
"Might" is a verb and a noun and, as such, does not have a comparative or superlative degree.
comparative
stronger, strongest
The comparative is taller and the superlative is tallest.Tall, taller, tallest.
comparative-taller superlative-tallest
Comparative is like She is TALLER than him. Superlative is like She is the TALLEST in the class.
The word tall *is* an adjective. The comparative and superlative are taller and tallest.
Taller is an adjective. It is the comparative form of tall, meaning "more tall." The superlative form is tallest.
Rigorous comparative and superlative refer to forms of adjectives and adverbs that denote varying degrees of a quality. The comparative form compares two entities (e.g., "taller"), while the superlative form expresses the highest degree among three or more entities (e.g., "tallest"). Rigorous usage ensures that these forms are applied correctly, adhering to grammatical rules and contexts. For example, "She is taller than her brother" (comparative) and "She is the tallest in her class" (superlative).
comparative : purer superlative : purest
Comparative: older Superlative: oldest
Dative; Early Comparative; Earlier Superlative; Earliest
The comparative and superlativeforms of grand are: Comparative: grander Superlative: grandest
comparative - merrier superlative - merriest
comparative = sadder superlative = saddest