shier
'Shyer' or 'shier'; 'shyest' or 'shiest'. You could also use 'more shy' and 'most shy', which are preferable to the other terms in some respects.
most expentsive more more more,,
if they are short - est That's superlative. Comparative has -er
In the sentence that you give, John was faster but Billy was the fastest, there are comparative adjectives, faster and fastest. The verb in this sentence is was. It is not a comparative verb, just a verb. An existential verb, to be precise.
more convenient
'Shyer' or 'shier'; 'shyest' or 'shiest'. You could also use 'more shy' and 'most shy', which are preferable to the other terms in some respects.
i have no idea im really young to know this lol
Sure! Please provide the adjectives you'd like me to give the comparative and superlative degrees for.
Busy becomes busier and busiest.
most expentsive more more more,,
The 3 forms of adjectives are comparative, superlative, and positive. Example: Positive- bad Comparative- worse Superlative- worst
Shier (alternate spelling shyer).
shier
The comparative for the word "shy" is "shier" or "more shy." Both forms are acceptable, but "shier" is less commonly used.
Hardworking, temperamental, shy, sarcastic, and loving.
That is not a question, but a statement. Statements in English are suffixed by period (.), not question mark (?).heavy - heavier - heaviest
if they are short - est That's superlative. Comparative has -er