The comparative form of "miserable" is "more miserable," and the superlative form is "most miserable." Since "miserable" is a three-syllable adjective, it typically uses "more" and "most" rather than adding suffixes. For example, you might say, "This winter has been more miserable than last year," or "That was the most miserable day of my life."
The comparative form for the adjective miserable is more miserable; the superlative form is most miserable.
The comparative is later, and the superlative is latest
The comparative and superlative to the word cruelly are "more cruel" and "cruellest".
The comparative is truer and the superlative is truest.
comparative: earlier superlative: earliest
The comparative form for the adjective miserable is more miserable; the superlative form is most miserable.
The superlative is cloudiest; the comparative is cloudier.
Comparative: uglier Superlative: ugliest
What's the comparative and superlative of the word "exact"
Comparative: shallower Superlative: shallowest
The comparative is "stricter" and the superlative is "strictest".
comparative = sadder superlative = saddest
comparative: trustworthier. superlative: trustworthiest.
fewer - comparative & fewest - superlative
comparative- smarter superlative- smartest
The comparative is later, and the superlative is latest
shorter (comparative) shortest (superlative)