It changes an adjective to a superlative adjective.
In the sentence Then they add flour and some salt,the adjective is some
add er in comparative and add est in superlative
It must be an adjective.
The adjective "doux" is used. E.g. "Le café doux."It is sweetened, "Il est adouci."It is sugared, "Il est sucré."
You could add er and est. That's all i could find :)
It changes an adjective to a superlative adjective.
Best.
Comparative-more honest Superlative-most honest Trust me. Since you cannot add "er" or "est," and the adjective is a regular adjective, you can only add "more" and "most."
You are increasing the strength of an adjective, usually when comparing it to something: My grades are higher than yours.
Sad is a short adjective so you just add -er to make the comparative form = sadder You add -est to make the superlative form = saddest
The statement 'Quin est loco' is a mix of French and Spansh words. For the adjective 'loco' needs to be written 'fou'. The corrected phrase 'Quin est fou' therefore means Quin is crazy. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. And the adjective 'fou' means 'crazy'.
"Ey duh" or "ehst duh" may be pronunciations of the incomplete French phrase est de.Specifically, the word est is an adjective, noun or verb; and the word de is a preposition. The adjective/noun means "east." The verb means "(he/she/it) is." The preposition means "from, of."
Yes. Ex: il est grand (he is tall) where the adjective grand qualifies the pronoun il.
Athènes (the capital of Greece) is a feminine gender noun. You would say "Berlin est grand, et Athènes est grande" using a masculine adjective for Berlin and a feminine adjective for Athènes.
When you add "ous" to "mischief," it creates the adjective "mischievous," which describes someone or something causing or showing a fondness for causing trouble in a playful or mildly malicious way.
baddestbiggesthottestfattestfittestflattestgladdestglibbestgrimmestmaddestsaddestslimmestsmuggestthinnesttrimmest