The Highest possible version of the adjective, it usually has the suffix -est on the end. e.g. greatEST fastEST strongEST etc.
Superlative Adjectives are: Adjectives that have been taken to the highest degree in form.
EXAMPLE: Big, Bigger, Biggest <--- Biggest is the Superlative Adjective because it's in its highest degree in form.
Here it is in a sentence: That dog is the biggest of the 3.
The highest degree, the most extreme of something. To use a superlative, you must be comparing more than two separate examples. In addition to adjectives preceded by the word "most", these are all superlatives:
least
worst
best
hottest
coldest
biggest
smallest
prettiest
youngest
oldest
weakest
strongest
highest
lowest
fastest
slowest
The superlative form of an adjective describes the highest or extreme degrees of specific qualities of one item from a group of items. For example in the sentence "Scott is the tallest.", "the tallest" is the superlative adjective used to describe Scott.
Superlative adjectives (like "big") would end in "est" (making it "biggest"). Most adjectives end in "est" when they are superlative.
But, for an adjective like "beautiful", you put "most" at the front of it, making it "most beautiful". that's because "beautifulest" isn't an English word. Some other words have "most" at the front, like "most complete" and "most debatable" etc.
In grammar, the superlative is the form of an adverb or adjective that expresses a degree of the adverb or adjective being used that is greater than any other possible degree of the given descriptor. English superlatives are typically formed with the suffix -est (e.g. healthiest, weakest) or the word most (most recent, most interesting).
Superlative is modifier. Modifier of Adjective.
good - superlative = the best...
worse - superlative - the worst....
great - superlative = the greatest....
high - superlative - the highest....
A superlative adjective is an adjective that expresses the highest order, degree, or quality of something. For example, the "best" or the "brightest" person.
Lol
It changes an adjective to a superlative adjective.
The superlative adjective of bright is brightest
Sleep is a noun and does not have a superlative. Sleepy is an adjective and the superlative is "sleepiest."
Anger is a noun, not an adjective. The adjective is angry and the superlative is the angriest.
Yes, bigger is an adjective. It's the comparative form of big.
It changes an adjective to a superlative adjective.
Yes, it is. It is the superlative form of the adjective loud, and means most loud.
The superlative adjective of bright is brightest
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
Sleep is a noun and does not have a superlative. Sleepy is an adjective and the superlative is "sleepiest."
Anger is a noun, not an adjective. The adjective is angry and the superlative is the angriest.
Yes, bigger is an adjective. It's the comparative form of big.
Do you mean what does the adjective 'superlative' mean? Superlative - (adj) the very best of; extraordinary. That was a superlative speech, Jack. The Miracle of Dunkirk is a superlative example of patriotic solidarity. If someone said the words 'superlative adjective' to me, I would assume they were referring to something they'd read, and that they felt that one of the adjectives that'd been used had been the perfect descriptor for what the author was trying to relay.
Adjective, comparative, superlative little, less, least
The superlative for the adjective "novel" is "most novel."
No, the superlative would be fastest.
Longest is the superlative.