Whiter.
Example
My blouse is whiter than yours.
or
Dan´s shirt is white, but Paul´s is whiter.
Saddest is the superlative degree.
The positive degree of "best" is "good." In English grammar, the positive degree is the base form of an adjective, used to describe a quality without any comparison. "Best" is the superlative form of the adjective "good," which indicates the highest degree of quality.
No pale is a verb or an adjective. Pronouns are words like -- he him her your my she it
round, oval, curved, colorful, pale, cold, hot, yummy, delicious
comparative
full
great
Palest is the Superlative Adjective for pale. To get the Superlative Adjective, you need to put the Adjective in the highest degree. EX: Big, Bigger, Biggest Tall, Taller, Tallest
Saddest is the superlative degree.
Some adjectives form Irregular form.EXamplE:positive:wellive: bestcomparative:betterSuperlat
pale in comparison (withsomething) also pale by comparison (with something)to seem lacking in importance or quality than something else I thought I had a frightening accident, but mine pales in comparison with yourspale in comparison
The positive degree of the adjective "better" is "good." The positive degree describes the basic form of an adjective without any comparison, while "better" is the comparative form used to compare two things.
The word 'comparative' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'comparative' is a word for the middle degree of an adjective or adverb; a thing equivalent to another.Example: The comparative of the adjective short is shorter.The noun form of the adjective 'comparative' is comparativeness.
Pale may be a noun, verb, adverb and adjective.
You compare adjectives and adverbs, not nouns.
Superlative
The degree of comparison for the adjective "lazy" includes three forms: the positive degree ("lazy"), the comparative degree ("lazier"), and the superlative degree ("laziest"). The positive degree describes a quality without comparison, the comparative degree compares two entities, and the superlative degree compares three or more entities. For example, "He is lazy," "She is lazier than him," and "He is the laziest of all."