Busy becomes busier and busiest.
The comparative form of busy is busier.
Adjectives with examples: bony (fish), beautiful (mind), bashful (child), blinding (light), busy (street), bungling (fool), buried (treasure), blue (shoes - of suede), black (hair), brown (eyes).
Bustling. Big. Busy. Filthy. basically anything you think of when you think of cities, there are Country Towns and Busy Cities and Mega Metropolises(?), the combinations are only limited by your mind.
After a busy day is a prepositional phrase.after - prepositiona - articlebusy - adjectiveday - noun
Busy is the adjective form. Example use:You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
most expentsive more more more,,
busier, busiest
busier, and busiest
busier, busiest
They are "busier" and "busiest".
Neither. It's the positive degree.
Comparative: busier Superlative: busiest
The comparative form of busy is busier.
The superlative form of "busy" is "busiest."
The comparative form of busy is busier.
The comparative form of "busy" is "busier."
The word "busy" can take on different forms: Busy (adjective): being occupied with tasks Busier (comparative adjective): more occupied or engaged Busiest (superlative adjective): the most occupied or engaged Busily (adverb): in a busy or engaged manner Busyness (noun): the state of being busy or occupied.