The comparative degree of "ugly" is "uglier," and the superlative degree is "ugliest." These forms are used to compare the quality of ugliness between two or more subjects, with "uglier" indicating a greater degree of ugliness than another subject, and "ugliest" signifying the highest degree of ugliness among three or more subjects.
Comparative: uglier Superlative: ugliest
uglier is the comparative & ugliest is the superlative
The comparative and superlative degrees of clean are cleaner and cleanest.
Ugly, Uglier, Ugliest.
out
unfriendly
uglier, ugliest
Get is a verb and does not have comparative or superlative degrees.
Comparative and superlative degrees are for adjectives and adverbs. House can be used as a noun or a verb and does not have comparative or superlative forms.
more out, most out
more in, most in
more in, most in