More beautiful and most beautiful are the comparative and superlative forms of beautiful.
more beautiful, most beautiful
More beautiful, most beautifulmore beautiful, most beautiful
Comparative: more beautiful Superlative: most beautiful
Nouns do not have comparative forms; adjectives have comparative and superlative forms. The comparative form for the adjective beautiful is more beautiful; the superlative form is most beautiful.
The comparative and superlative forms of gentle are gentler and gentlest.
Riper and ripest are the comparative and superlative forms of ripe.
No, "late" does not have comparative or superlative forms. "Later" is the comparative form of "late," and "latest" is the superlative form.
The comparative forms of loudly, as with any other adverb, are simple: Comparative: more loudly Superlative: most loudly The comparative forms of loud are: Comparative: louder Superlative: loudest
"Beautiful" is neither a comparative nor a superlative; it is the base form of the adjective. The comparative form is "more beautiful," and the superlative form is "most beautiful." These forms are used to compare qualities among two or more subjects.
the comparative and superlative forms of the word near are nearer(in comparative form) and nearest(in superlative form).
Comparative: poorer Superlative: poorest
Comparative: shallower Superlative: shallowest