Yes.
The biggest house is number 23. - singular
The biggest houses are at the end of the street. - plural
A superlative adjective its self is not plural or singular the noun it describes can be plural or singular
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?
Comparative: Whiter Superlative: Whitest
The superlative of slow is slowest. The comparative is slower.
The word singular is an adjective. Adjectives do not have singular or plural forms; adjectives have comparative forms: positive: singular comparative: more singular superlative: most singular
No, 'smallest' is an adjective. It modifies a noun. Smallest is a superlative adjective.
"Extremely good" is an English equivalent of the Italian word bonissima. The feminine singular superlative reflects the combination of the feminine singular bona ("good") and the feminine singular ending -issima ("extremely," "most," very"). The pronunciation of the ancient, dialectical word will be "bo-NEES-see-ma" in Italian.
Sleep is a noun and does not have a superlative. Sleepy is an adjective and the superlative is "sleepiest."
No, the word 'eldest' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. (eldest child).The adjective 'eldest' is the superlative form of the adjective 'old' (elder, eldest).
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.
"Studying" is not a superlative, as it is not an adjective. "Most studious" is a superlative of "studious."
most superlative is the superlative form of superlative
Tallest is the superlative.
superlative of quiet
'Very, very good' is an English equivalent of 'buonissima'. The Italian word is the feminine singular form of the superlative. The masculine form for 'very, very good' is 'buonissimo'.