more convincingly & most convincingly
The adverb form for the verb to convince is convincingly.
The superlative form of "convincingly" is "most convincingly." In English, adverbs that do not follow a one-syllable pattern typically use "most" to form the superlative. Therefore, when comparing the degree to which something is convincing, you would say something is done "most convincingly" to indicate it exceeds all others in that quality.
The comparative form of in is inner.
The comparative form of solid is solider
comparative - merrier superlative - merriest
The adverb form for the verb to convince is convincingly.
The superlative form of "convincingly" is "most convincingly." In English, adverbs that do not follow a one-syllable pattern typically use "most" to form the superlative. Therefore, when comparing the degree to which something is convincing, you would say something is done "most convincingly" to indicate it exceeds all others in that quality.
The adverb form of "conviction" is "convincingly."
The comparative form of busy is busier.
The comparative form of dreamy is dreamier
The comparative form of friendly is friendlier.
comparative form is cleaner superlative form is cleanest
The comparative form of "central" is "more central."
The comparative form of many is more
not convince
The comparative form of "clean" is "cleaner."
The comparative form of friendly is friendlier.