Banana silly.
brave: braver, bravest
A comparative adjective is one that compares two things: "Kayla was FASTER than Sally."A superlative adjective describes the most, greatest, or best: "Kayla was the FASTEST runner I have ever seen."
There is no comparative of get.
comparative
comparative
superlative - bravest comparative - braver positive - brave
brave: braver, bravest
braver
braver
most bravely, more bravely
more bravely, most bravely
No, the word 'braver' is the comparative form of the adjective brave (braver, bravest).The noun form of the adjective 'brave' is braveness.
The comparative form is more courageous and the superlative is most courageous
The correct term is "braver," as it is the comparative form of the adjective "brave." In English, when comparing two things, we typically add "-er" to one-syllable adjectives. Therefore, when discussing bravery in a comparative context, you would say someone is "braver" than someone else.
A comparative adjective is one that compares two things: "Kayla was FASTER than Sally."A superlative adjective describes the most, greatest, or best: "Kayla was the FASTEST runner I have ever seen."
braver, bravest more famous, most famous more lonesome, most lonesome worthier, worthiest more difficult, most difficult
There is no comparative of get.