The degree of an adjective has no relation to the number of the noun it describes. For example, the degrees for the adjective 'good' are:
positive: good (We have a good song. Or, We have three good songs.)
comparative: better (The better linens are more expensive. Or, We have four better linens that are more expensive.)
superlative: best (The best entry is the nut loaf. Or, The three best entries are the nut loaf, the lemon loaf, and the cranberry loaf.)
Adjective grades for comparison between two and among more things, person of places. Note: Adjective has three grades ( degrees ) Absolute : Comparative : Superlative
The positive degree of an adjective is the simple form. ('My cat was fat.') The comparative degree compares two things. (Peter's cat was fatter than mine.') The superlative degree compares three or more things and indicates which of them displays more of the adjective than any of the others. ('David's cat was the fattest of all.') Most regular short adjectives form the comparative by adding 'er' (doubling the final consonant if necessary) and the superlative by adding 'est' (also doubling the final consonant if necessary). Longer adjectives, and some short ones, place 'more' and 'most' in front of the positive degree. Examples: 'I thought the Grand Canyon was wonderful, but the Great Wall of China was more wonderful.' 'Mary was the most bookish member of her family.' It is incorrect to use the superlative degree when only two things are being compared. Examples: 'Which is the better tie to wear with this shirt - the grey one or the blue one?' (Not 'Which is the best tie ...') 'Anna was the elder of the two sisters' (Not ' ... the eldest of the two sisters.')
There are three adjective forms, which may be applied specifically in medical care. They are ligamental, ligamentary, and ligamentous.
no, it is a noun because each of adjective can be added by word " very" before the word. for example; very beautiful, very good, etc..
· acute · adept · agile · aging · ahead · alert · alike · alive · aloof · amber · ample · angry · antsy · artsy · awake · aware · awful
Adjectives and adverbs have 3 different forms to show degrees of comparison.Positive degree is the base form of the adjective or adverb; it does not show comparison. An example would be "a tall tree" which is a positive degree adjective. This means the tree is not being compared to anything.Comparative degree is the form an adjective or adverb takes to compare two things. An example for comparative degree would be "a taller tree." This means that two trees are being compared in which one tree is taller than the other.Superlative degree is the form an adjective or adverb takes to compare three or more things. "Tallest tree" is a superlative degree, comparing 3 or more trees.
You compare adjectives and adverbs, not nouns.
The comparative form compares two things eg the red car is faster than the blue car, (faster is the comparative adjective).The superlative form is used to compare three or more things and to pick out one as being more (something) than all the others. The red car is fast and so is the blue car but the silver one is the fastest, (fastest is the superlative adjective)
There is no specific definition for the word "superlarative." It appears to be a misspelling or a combination of "superlative" and "comparative." The term "superlative" is an adjective used to describe something as the highest degree or quality of its kind.
A superlative adjective is an adjective we use to compare three or more things to pick out one thing that is more ''something" than the others.eg adjective tall - Martin is the tallest in the class.For longer adjectives (more than one syllable) we use most.eg adjective famous - Martin is the most famous in our family.
The suffixes -er and -est are added to adjectives or describing words to compare things.
Superlative
Adverbs modify a verb, another adverb, or an adjective.
Adjective grades for comparison between two and among more things, person of places. Note: Adjective has three grades ( degrees ) Absolute : Comparative : Superlative
The word 'happiest' is an adjective; the superlative form of the adjective 'happy' (happier, happiest). There are three types of adjectives: -Normal adjectives -Comparative adjectives, comparing only out of two things -Superlative adjectives, comparing three or more things. For bad, it would be: -Bad -Worse -Worst.
No. Hours is a plural noun. There is an adjective "hourly" that refers to things done by or on the hour. if you use 'hour' singularly, you can form the possessive adjective hour's. To do this with 'hours' you would have to create an adverbial (e.g. three hours) and take the possessive of that (e.g. three hours' time).
the three milesians were different from their styles. they do not have same viewpoints about the things