The comparative form of "short" is "shorter," as in, "He is shorter than I."
The comparative form of risky is riskier, and the superlative form is riskiest. The word risky is short enough to form the comparative and superlative forms this way. For longer words, you would need to precede the word with more (for comparative) and most (for superlative).
The comparative form of rude is ruder, and the superlative form is rudest. It is common to form the comparative and superlative of short words like this by adding -er and -est.
Shallower, shallowest. More shallow, most shallow. Both forms are acceptable, but the first (..er, ..est) is probably more commonly used.
more serious
The comparative form of solid is solider
The comparative form of risky is riskier, and the superlative form is riskiest. The word risky is short enough to form the comparative and superlative forms this way. For longer words, you would need to precede the word with more (for comparative) and most (for superlative).
The comparative form of rude is ruder, and the superlative form is rudest. It is common to form the comparative and superlative of short words like this by adding -er and -est.
Shallower, shallowest. More shallow, most shallow. Both forms are acceptable, but the first (..er, ..est) is probably more commonly used.
The word 'comparative' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'comparative' is a word for the middle degree of an adjective or adverb; a thing equivalent to another.Example: The comparative of the adjective short is shorter.The noun form of the adjective 'comparative' is comparativeness.
With adverbs ending in -ly, you must use moreto form the comparative, and most to form the superlative.With short adverbs that do not end in -ly comparative and superlative forms are identical to adjectives: add -erto form the comparative and -est to form the superlative. If the adverb ends in e, remove it before adding the ending.
The comparative form of dreamy is dreamier
more serious
The comparative form of many is more
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 comparative form of "softly" is "more softly."
The comparative form of good is better.
"Truer" is the comparative form of true.